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Featured researches published by Matteo Muratori.


Environmental Research Letters | 2016

Global economic consequences of deploying bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS)

Matteo Muratori; Katherine Calvin; Marshall A. Wise; Page Kyle; Jae Edmonds

Bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS) is considered a potential source of net negative carbon emissions and, if deployed at sufficient scale, could help reduce carbon dioxide emissions and concentrations. However, the viability and economic consequences of large-scale BECCS deployment are not fully understood. We use the Global Change Assessment Model (GCAM) integrated assessment model to explore the potential global and regional economic impacts of BECCS. As a negative-emissions technology, BECCS would entail a net subsidy in a policy environment in which carbon emissions are taxed. We show that by mid-century, in a world committed to limiting climate change to 2 °C, carbon tax revenues have peaked and are rapidly approaching the point where climate mitigation is a net burden on general tax revenues. Assuming that the required policy instruments are available to support BECCS deployment, we consider its effects on global trade patterns of fossil fuels, biomass, and agricultural products. We find that in a world committed to limiting climate change to 2 °C, the absence of CCS harms fossil-fuel exporting regions, while the presence of CCS, and BECCS in particular, allows greater continued use and export of fossil fuels. We also explore the relationship between carbon prices, food-crop prices and use of BECCS. We show that the carbon price and biomass and food crop prices are directly related. We also show that BECCS reduces the upward pressure on food crop prices by lowering carbon prices and lowering the total biomass demand in climate change mitigation scenarios. All of this notwithstanding, many challenges, both technical and institutional, remain to be addressed before BECCS can be deployed at scale.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2017

Role of the Freight Sector in Future Climate Change Mitigation Scenarios

Matteo Muratori; Steven J. Smith; Page Kyle; Robert Link; Bryan Mignone; Haroon S. Kheshgi

The freight sectors role is examined using the Global Change Assessment Model (GCAM) for a range of climate change mitigation scenarios and future freight demand assumptions. Energy usage and CO2 emissions from freight have historically grown with a correlation to GDP, and there is limited evidence of near-term global decoupling of freight demand from GDP. Over the 21st century, greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from freight are projected to grow faster than passenger transportation or other major end-use sectors, with the magnitude of growth dependent on the assumed extent of long-term decoupling. In climate change mitigation scenarios that apply a price to GHG emissions, mitigation of freight emissions (including the effects of demand elasticity, mode and technology shifting, and fuel substitution) is more limited than for other demand sectors. In such scenarios, shifting to less-emitting transportation modes and technologies is projected to play a relatively small role in reducing freight emissions in GCAM. By contrast, changes in the supply chain of liquid fuels that reduce the fuel carbon intensity, especially deriving from large-scale use of biofuels coupled to carbon capture and storage technologies, are responsible for the majority of freight emissions mitigation, followed by price-induced reduction in freight demand services.


SAE Technical Paper Series | 2018

Exploring Telematics Big Data for Truck Platooning Opportunities

Michael Lammert; Bruce Bugbee; Yi Hou; Andrea Mack; Matteo Muratori; Jacob Holden; Adam Duran; Eric Swaney

NREL completed a temporal and geospatial analysis of telematics data to estimate the fraction of platoonable miles traveled by class 8 tractor trailers currently in operation. This paper discusses the value and limitations of very large but low time-resolution data sets, and the fuel consumption reduction opportunities from large scale adoption of platooning technology for class 8 highway vehicles in the US based on telematics data. The telematics data set consist of about 57,000 unique vehicles traveling over 210 million miles combined during a two-week period. 75% of the total fuel consumption result from vehicles operating in top gear, suggesting heavy highway utilization. The data is at a one-hour resolution, resulting in a significant fraction of data be uncategorizable, yet significant value can still be extracted from the remaining data. Multiple analysis methods to estimate platoonable miles are discussed. Results indicate that 63% of total miles driven at known hourly-average speeds happens at speeds amenable to platooning. When also considering availability of nearby partner vehicles, results indicate 55.7% of all classifiable miles driven were platoonable. Analysis also address the availability of numerous partners enabling platoons greater than 2 trucks and the percentage of trucks that would be required to be equipped with platooning equipment to realize more than 50% of the possible savings.


Climatic Change | 2018

Global energy sector emission reductions and bioenergy use: overview of the bioenergy demand phase of the EMF-33 model comparison

Nico Bauer; Steven K. Rose; Shinichiro Fujimori; Detlef P. van Vuuren; John P. Weyant; Marshall A. Wise; Yiyun Cui; Vassilis Daioglou; Matthew J. Gidden; Etsushi Kato; Alban Kitous; Florian Leblanc; Ronald D. Sands; Fuminori Sano; Jessica Strefler; Junichi Tsutsui; Ruben Bibas; Oliver Fricko; Tomoko Hasegawa; David R. Klein; Atsushi Kurosawa; Silvana Mima; Matteo Muratori

We present an overview of results from 11 integrated assessment models (IAMs) that participated in the 33rd study of the Stanford Energy Modeling Forum (EMF-33) on the viability of large-scale deployment of bioenergy for achieving long-run climate goals. The study explores future bioenergy use across models under harmonized scenarios for future climate policies, availability of bioenergy technologies, and constraints on biomass supply. This paper provides a more transparent description of IAMs that span a broad range of assumptions regarding model structures, energy sectors, and bioenergy conversion chains. Without emission constraints, we find vastly different CO2 emission and bioenergy deployment patterns across models due to differences in competition with fossil fuels, the possibility to produce large-scale bio-liquids, and the flexibility of energy systems. Imposing increasingly stringent carbon budgets mostly increases bioenergy use. A diverse set of available bioenergy technology portfolios provides flexibility to allocate bioenergy to supply different final energy as well as remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere by combining bioenergy with carbon capture and sequestration (BECCS). Sector and regional bioenergy allocation varies dramatically across models mainly due to bioenergy technology availability and costs, final energy patterns, and availability of alternative decarbonization options. Although much bioenergy is used in combination with CCS, BECCS is not necessarily the driver of bioenergy use. We find that the flexibility to use biomass feedstocks in different energy sub-sectors makes large-scale bioenergy deployment a robust strategy in mitigation scenarios that is surprisingly insensitive with respect to reduced technology availability. However, the achievability of stringent carbon budgets and associated carbon prices is sensitive. Constraints on biomass feedstock supply increase the carbon price less significantly than excluding BECCS because carbon removals are still realized and valued. Incremental sensitivity tests find that delayed readiness of bioenergy technologies until 2050 is more important than potentially higher investment costs.


SAE International Journal of Commercial Vehicles | 2017

Potentials for Platooning in U.S. Highway Freight Transport

Matteo Muratori; Jacob Holden; Michael Lammert; Adam Duran; Stanley Young; Jeffrey Gonder

Smart technologies enabling connection among vehicles and between vehicles and infrastructure as well as vehicle automation to assist human operators are receiving significant attention as a means for improving road transportation systems by reducing fuel consumption – and related emissions – while also providing additional benefits through improving overall traffic safety and efficiency. For truck applications, which are currently responsible for nearly three-quarters of the total U.S. freight energy use and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, platooning has been identified as an early feature for connected and automated vehicles (CAVs) that could provide significant fuel savings and improved traffic safety and efficiency without radical design or technology changes compared to existing vehicles. A statistical analysis was performed based on a large collection of real-world U.S. truck usage data to estimate the fraction of total miles that are technically suitable for platooning. In particular, our analysis focuses on estimating “platoonable” mileage based on overall highway vehicle use and prolonged high-velocity traveling, and established that about 65% of the total miles driven by combination trucks from this data sample could be driven in platoon formation, leading to a 4% reduction in total truck fuel consumption. This technical potential for “platoonable” miles in the United States provides an upper bound for scenario analysis considering fleet willingness and convenience to platoon as an estimate of overall benefits of early adoption of connected and automated vehicle technologies. A benefit analysis is proposed to assess the overall potential for energy savings and emissions mitigation by widespread implementation of highway platooning for trucks.


Archive | 2017

Electrification Futures Study: End-Use Electric Technology Cost and Performance Projections through 2050

Laura Vimmerstedt; Paige Jadun; Colin A. McMillan; Daniel Steinberg; Matteo Muratori; Trieu Mai


Energy Procedia | 2017

The Future Role of CCS in Electricity and Liquid Fuel Supply

Matteo Muratori; Haroon S. Kheshgi; Bryan Mignone; Haewon C. McJeon; Leon E. Clarke


Nature Energy | 2018

Impact of Uncoordinated Plug-in Electric Vehicle Charging on Residential Power Demand

Matteo Muratori


Energies | 2018

Modeling Hydrogen Refueling Infrastructure to Support Passenger Vehicles

Matteo Muratori; Brian Bush; Chad Hunter; Marc Melaina


Archive | 2018

National Hydrogen Scenarios: How Many Stations, Where, and When?

Marc Melaina; Brian Bush; Matteo Muratori; Jarett Zuboy; Stephen Ellis

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Marc Melaina

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Brian Bush

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Colin A. McMillan

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Daniel Steinberg

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Laura Vimmerstedt

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Paige Jadun

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Trieu Mai

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Adam Duran

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Eric Wood

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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Jacob Holden

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

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