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LAB NEWS AND VIEWS

Awarded DOE SEEDS4 grant on community perceptions of utility-scale solar

6/5/2024

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As part of a Department of Energy SEEDS 4 award, the Spatial Climate Solutions lab as part of the The 2035 Initiative joins a team of researchers, led by the Solar and Storage Industries Institute, to test and evaluate innovative community engagement practices used in large-scale solar project siting and permitting. Dr. Min and Prof. Wu will be working on this project to support the design and deployment of community surveys led by Prof Matto Mildenberger and Dr. Gabe De Roche.
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See the SSII press release here and DOE press release here. 
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Spatial Climate Solutions Lab and collaborators awarded a $300k grant from the Platform for Agriculture and Climate Transformation

11/15/2023

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The Spatial Climate Solutions Lab and the 2035 Initiative at UCSB, along with collaborators Justin Baker at North Carolina State University, Chris Wade at Research Triangle Institute (RTI), and Aline Mosnier at the Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN) were awarded a grant to model US GHG emissions resulting from funding climate smart agricultural practices through the U.S. Farm Bill. 

We will be taking a multi-modeling approach that leverages EPA and USDA produced marginal abatement cost curves for particular climate change mitigation agricultural practices and using the US FABLE Calculator to estimate national GHG emissions, land use change, crop production, and biodiversity impacts of various suites of climate smart agriculture funding programs. 

The UCSB team will consist of 2035 Initiative staff and two Spatial Climate Solutions Lab researchers.
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Spatial Climate Solutions Lab and multi-UC team win a UC Climate Action Grant for grid expansion planning for disadvantaged communities in California

8/21/2023

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UCSB PIs Grace Wu, Ranjit Deshmukh, Matto Mildenberger, and Michael Ludkovski are part of a multi-UC team including UC San Diego and UC Berkeley that was awarded a $2.8 million UC Climate Action grant. ​

Deeply reducing energy use emissions while ensuring reliable infrastructure is critical to meet
California’s carbon neutrality goals by 2045 (California Air Resources Board 2022 Scoping Plan). Extreme weather events, such as wildfires and heavy precipitation, have increased the complexity of meeting this goal while maintaining reliable electricity services, as evidenced by Public Safety Power Shutoffs (PSPS). Recent literature on grid operations during climate emergencies have revealed significant inequities in the populations most affected by load shedding and restoration prioritization decision-making. In parallel, adoption of end-use electrification and distributed energy resources (DERs, such as PV) in California households are key strategies for a resilient carbon neutral grid. Adoption of these technologies has been inequitable across disadvantaged communities (DACs), intersecting with inequitable electricity reliability in divergent ways. Achieving resiliency in California’s electricity grid, especially in disadvantaged communities, will not only require a technical redesign of our grid’s infrastructure and operation but also a more nuanced understanding of the barriers to climate action and local resilience in the diverse array of communities across our state.

The UCSB team (Spatial Climate Solutions Lab, CETLab, and the 2035 Initiative) will be leading Thrust 1: Projecting household electrification and adoption of DERs at the census tract level and under future policy scenarios. In Thrust 2, we will work with community partners in select DACs across California to design microgrid configurations that best meet their needs. 
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Spatial climate solutions lab

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Professor Grace C. Wu
4031 Bren Hall
Environmental Studies Program
Santa Barbara, CA 93106

​situated on unceded Indigenous Chumash lands and waters

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Grace Wu 2024
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