ComEd Launches Three New Studies to Help Design the Power Grid to Support State’s Clean Energy Goals
ComEd has launched three studies aimed at addressing technical and community challenges related to the clean energy transition mandated by the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act (CEJA). These studies focus on decarbonization pathways, disadvantaged communities, and the impact on jobs. Partnering with various research teams, ComEd aims to explore achieving net-zero emissions by 2050, improve access to clean energy services for underrepresented groups, and identify job opportunities in the clean energy sector. The studies will conclude by fall 2022, supporting ComEd's investment plans for a sustainable energy future.
- Launch of three studies to support clean energy transition under CEJA.
- Focus on decarbonization pathways aims for a net-zero economy by 2050.
- Research addresses clean energy access for disadvantaged communities.
- Job impact study seeks to identify new employment opportunities in clean energy.
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Along with recently announced Climate Risk and Adaptation Study, new research to inform ComEd’s grid plans, state’s policy work
“CEJA provides a roadmap to an equitable clean energy future for
These studies complement the comprehensive Climate Risk and Adaptation Study announced last week by ComEd and the
For each of the new studies, ComEd has retained experienced research teams who have worked on these issues around the country. Stakeholder feedback and discussion will also be vital to helping inform the studies with a full picture of the challenges and opportunities associated with meeting the state’s energy goals and creating an equitable clean energy economy. These new studies will focus on three topics:
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Decarbonization Pathways
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ComEd is partnering with Energy+Environmental Economics (E3) to explore different pathways for
Illinois which would achieve a net zero economy by 2050. While CEJA focused on power generation and achieving a decarbonized energy sector, this study will look beyond CEJA to full, economy-wide decarbonization.
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ComEd is partnering with Energy+Environmental Economics (E3) to explore different pathways for
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Disadvantaged/Underrepresented Communities
- ComEd is partnering with ILLUME Advising (ILLUME) to investigate clean energy services within disadvantaged communities. Through stakeholder engagement and regional analysis, ILLUME will explore the barriers that disadvantaged and environmental justice communities face in equitably receiving services toward clean energy transformation.
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Jobs
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ComEd is partnering with
BW Research to study the clean energy transformation’s impact on theIllinois workforce – particularly, the potential for new jobs in disadvantaged communities. This study will identify emerging employment opportunities in clean energy as well as potential transitions for those workers displaced from the retirement of fossil fuels. The research will include both statewide and regional analyses to support strategic planning as well as identifying workforce development opportunities for career pathways, economic mobility, and improved education and training programs.
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ComEd is partnering with
All three studies are intended to be complete by the fall of 2022, and a final report will be made publicly available for each.
“Building the energy infrastructure needed to support a clean energy economy will require the training and hiring of thousands of diverse, highly skilled union workers,” said
“As we build our clean energy future, we have an opportunity to address longstanding public health disparities and income inequality that disproportionally impact low-income residents and people of color,” said
Separately, the Climate Risk and Adaptation Study will examine the impact of changing weather due to climate change, including sustained heat and flooding risk, on the design and performance of the region’s power grid. It is the first study launched in concert with the Electric Power Research Institute’s (EPRI) Climate READi™: Power (REsilience and ADaptation initiative), a recently announced, three-year global program on climate change risk. This will be the first climate adaptation study in the region and one of the only studies in the nation to incorporate the impact of increased electrification into the climate risk planning process.
These studies will inform ComEd’s planned grid investments that will continue to enable the clean, reliable and affordable power that ComEd customers have come to expect. ComEd in the first three months of 2022 delivered its most reliable service on record for any first quarter in the company’s history. Since starting smart grid investments in 2012, ComEd has avoided more than 17 million customer interruptions due in part to smart grid and system improvements, including digital “smart switches” that automatically reroute power around potential problem areas. These investments have helped save customers more than
ComEd is a unit of
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Source: ComEd
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