Stanley, SarahSarahStanleyLahon, RinaliniRinaliniLahonO'Dwyer, CiaraCiaraO'DwyerRyan, L. (Lisa B.)L. (Lisa B.)RyanFlynn, DamianDamianFlynn2024-08-142024-08-142021-06-25http://hdl.handle.net/10197/26575The 26th Annual Conference of the European Association of Environmental and Resource Economists (EAERE 2021), Berlin, Germany, 23-25 June 2021Ambitious national renewable electricity targets in Europe have resulted in countries without significant hydro resources, such as Denmark, Ireland and Spain, aiming to source over 70% of their annual electricity consumption from variable renewables by as early as 2030. A high share of wind and solar power in the electricity system introduces numerous technical and operational issues, as well as raising questions about the financial viability of generators in the current electricity market. The objective of this paper is to examine whether such high shares of renewable electricity are economically feasible, under the current electricity market design and technical constraints, and the policy implications. We model system security, renewables curtailment, market prices and net present values of different technology types in 2030 under various renewable generation and electricity load profiles and scenarios. We find that high shares of renewable electricity in isolated systems such as Ireland could lead to curtailment of up to 15% but that additional interconnection, battery storage and dynamic load behaviour reduce this. Marginal prices fall to near zero in periods of high generation of renewable electricity. We estimate that this, combined with curtailment, may lead to insufficient revenues from the electricity price alone in existing electricity markets to cover the costs of generation for many renewable and conventional power plants. Changes to the design of electricity markets are needed to provide additional revenue streams from capacity markets and tariffs designed for system services and make future decarbonised electricity systems economically feasible.enRenewable electricityNational targetsBackbone energy system modelIs the transition to zero carbon power economically feasible? The case of a 70% variable renewables power systemConference Publication2023-08-0315/IA/305877350558357https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ie/