Hadi Eshraghi
North Carolina State University
13 Papers
11 Citations
Hadi Eshraghi is an academic researcher from North Carolina State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Renewable energy & Environmental science. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 11 publications. Previous affiliations of Hadi Eshraghi include Sharif University of Technology.
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Papers
US Energy-Related Greenhouse Gas Emissions in the Absence of Federal Climate Policy
TL;DR: This model-based analysis suggests that market forces are likely to keep US energy-related greenhouse gas emissions relatively flat or produce modest reductions in the absence of new federal policy.
27
North American energy system responses to natural gas price shocks
Maxwell Brown,Sauleh Siddiqui,Charalampos Avraam,John Bistline,Joseph F. DeCarolis,Hadi Eshraghi,Sara Giarola,Matthew Hansen,Peter Johnston,Saroj Khanal,Anahi Molar-Cruz +10 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluate how both the electricity and natural gas sectors could respond to hypothetical gas price shocks under different system configurations, such as renewable generation mandates or variations to renewable capacity costs.
24
Quantification of climate-induced interannual variability in residential U.S. electricity demand
Hadi Eshraghi,Anderson Rodrigo de Queiroz,Anderson Rodrigo de Queiroz,Arumugam Sankarasubramanian,Joseph F. DeCarolis +4 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors assess the sensitivity of residential electricity demand in 48 U.S. states to seasonal climate variations and structural changes pertaining to state-level household electricity demand.
20
Promoting reproducibility and increased collaboration in electric sector capacity expansion models with community benchmarking and intercomparison efforts
Candise L. Henry,Candise L. Henry,Hadi Eshraghi,Oleg Lugovoy,Michael Waite,Joseph F. DeCarolis,David J. Farnham,Tyler Ruggles,Rebecca A. M. Peer,Rebecca A. M. Peer,Yuezi Wu,A. Queiroz,Vladimir Potashnikov,Vijay Modi,Ken Caldeira +14 more
TL;DR: A model benchmarking effort using highly simplified scenarios applied to four open-source models of the U.S. electric sector shows that such a process can be effective for improving consistency across models and building model confidence, substantiating specific modeling choices, reporting uncertainties, and identifying areas for further research and development.
15
The Role of Temperature Variability on Seasonal Electricity Demand in the Southern US
Dylan L. Cawthorne,Anderson Rodrigo de Queiroz,Anderson Rodrigo de Queiroz,Hadi Eshraghi,Arumugam Sankarasubramanian,Joseph F. DeCarolis +5 more
- 02 Jun 2021
TL;DR: In this article, the role of temperature variability on electricity consumption over representative areas of the Southern United States was investigated and two states, Tennessee and Texas, which represent different climate regimes and have limited electricity trade with adjacent regions were considered.