Zukünftige Energie- und Industriesysteme
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Die Transformation des Energieversorgungssystems zu einer dekarbonisierten Energiebereitstellung bedingt ein koordiniertes Zusammenspiel der Sektoren Strom, Wärme und Verkehr. Dabei ist die Kopplung des Stromsektors mit dem Wärmesektor eine der entscheidenden Maßnahmen bei der Transformation. Die Aufnahme von Wind- und Sonnenenergie in das Netz kann durch genaue Einspeiseprognosen optimiert werden, die Kopplung zum Wärmesektor mittels Wärmepumpen und Power-to-Heat (Heizstab) ermöglicht die weitere Flexibilisierung der Nachfrageseite. Diese Interaktion wird durch intelligente Lösungen der Systemtechnik für das Energie- und Netzmanagement ermöglicht. Die Entwicklung von entsprechenden Anreizsystemen, Marktmechanismen und Geschäftsmodellen ist ebenfalls erforderlich, um diese Kopplung auch wirtschaftlich erfolgreich zu gestalten. Der Beitrag stellt das im Forschungsvorhaben "Interaktion EE-Strom, Wärme und Verkehr" erstellte 80-Prozent-Szenario für das Jahr 2050 vor und zeigt anhand von Beispielen zukünftige Anforderungen und Entwicklungen zu dieser Thematik auf.
Weiterentwicklung der Primärenergiefaktoren im neuen Energiesparrecht für Gebäude : Endbericht
(2016)
Zentrale Anforderungsgröße der gegenwärtigen Energieeinsparverordnung (EnEV) ist der Primärenergiebedarf, der mit Hilfe von energieträgerspezifischen Primärenergiefaktoren (PEF) aus dem Endenergiebedarf bzw. Endenergieverbrauch errechnet wird. Der PEF ist jedoch in vielen Fällen kein geeignetes Maß zur Bestimmung der Treibhausgas-Emissionen eines Heizungssystems oder eines Endenergieträgers und übt somit in Bezug auf den Klimaschutz nur eine bedingte Lenkungswirkung aus. Des Weiteren verlieren sehr niedrige nicht-erneuerbare Primärenergiefaktoren (PEFne) ihre Steuerungswirkung hin zu energieeffizienten Gebäuden und vernachlässigen andere wichtige Aspekte wie z. B. die Ressourcenverfügbarkeit von Energieträgern.
Ein Forschungskonsortium aus ITG, ifeu und Wuppertal Institut hat daher ein Überblickspapier zur möglichen Weiterentwicklung der Primärenergiefaktoren unter Einbeziehung der Treibhausgas-Emissionen erstellt. Darin werden wesentliche Defizite der bisherigen Lösung aufgezeigt und mehrere Vorschläge für eine Weiterentwicklung unter Berücksichtigung der CO2-Äquivalent-Emissionen erarbeitet. Der Projektbericht baut auf der dem Diskussionspapier "Konsistenz und Aussagefähigkeit der Primärenergie-Faktoren für Endenergieträger im Rahmen der EnEV" des Wuppertal Instituts auf und macht mehrere alternative und konkrete Vorschläge, wie die darin identifizierten Probleme durch eine Anpassung des PEFs behoben werden können.
Im Ergebnis wird ein Vorschlag zur kurzfristigen Umsetzung favorisiert, bei dem der bisherige Indikator "Primärenergie" um den Indikator "Klimaschutz" ergänzt wird. Langfristig gilt es, weitere Nachhaltigkeitsindikatoren bei der Lebenszyklus-Bewertung in den Vorketten von Energieträgern, Heizungssystemen und Gebäuden zu berücksichtigen. Dazu sind weitere Forschungsarbeiten erforderlich.
De-industrialization, climate and demographic changes are only a few key words that indicate the challenge of urban development in many industrialized countries for the coming decades. A fundamental transformation of infrastructure and the built environment is expected to adjust to future needs. Numerous concepts of integrating efficiency and renewable energy sources into urban planning were elaborated in recent years. Energy sufficiency in the meaning of voluntary demand reduction of energy intensive goods and services is the third and mostly forgotten pillar of sustainable development. However, organizational and spatial measures are needed to support behavior modification. This paper presents results of a transdisciplinary research design with local stakeholders and scientific experts to develop an understanding of what energy sufficiency might contribute to sustainable urban development. Based on the Multi-Level-Perspective of the transition research approach, it analyzes how stakeholders and experts define energy sufficiency structures for the shrinking district of Vohwinkel (Germany). The paper also shows a compilation and evaluation of measures which facilitate energy sufficient behavior in the fields of space heating and passenger transport on a local level. The methodological concept comprises expert interviews, thought experiments with stakeholders to develop a vision of an "energy sufficient Vohwinkel 2050" as well as a stakeholder workshop to discuss the results. A shrinking population is seen as a chance to actively adapt the built environment to foster energy sufficiency.
Will climate change stay below the 2 degree target in the 21st century on the basis of the COP 21 results? Looking into challenges and opportunities, this paper answers: To stay below the global 2dt is neither a real choice for the world society nor for businesses and civil societies in specific countries. It is a global guideline, scientifically developed for global negotiations, which should be broken down to national interests and actors. Key questions concerning the energy sector from the perspective of national interests are how to create and sustain a momentum for the inevitable energy transition, how to encourage disruptive innovations, avoid lock in effects, enable rapid deployment of energy efficiency and renewable energies etc. Or in other words: how to get to a competitive, economically benign, inclusive, low carbon and risk minimising energy system. With this background the paper argues that "burden sharing" is a misleading perception of strong climate mitigation strategies. It is more realistic to talk about "benefit sharing", using the monetary benefits and co-benefits of climate mitigation (e.g. energy cost savings, revenues from CO2-tax or emission trading systems) to help vulnerable national and international actors to adapt to the unavoidable climate risks. It has to be demonstrated on country level that the technologies and policy mix of strong climate mitigation and risk-minimising actions are indeed "benefit sharing" strategies which should be chosen anyhow, even if there was no climate change. For China and Germany this paper includes basic findings supporting this view.
In this paper a new method for the evaluation and comparison of potential future electricity systems is presented. The German electricity system in the year 2050 is used as an example. Based on a comprehensive scenario analysis defining a corridor for possible shares of fluctuating renewable energy sources (FRES) residual loads are calculated in a unified manner. The share of electricity from PV and wind power plants in Germany in the year 2050 is in a range of 42-122% and the load demand has a bandwidth of around 460-750 TWh. The residual loads are input for an algorithm that defines a supplementary mix of technologies providing flexibility to the system. The overall system layout guarantees the balance of generation and demand at all times. Due to the fact that the same method for residual load calculation and mixture of technologies is applied for all scenarios, a good comparability is guaranteed and we are able to identify key characteristics for future developments. The unique feature of the new algorithms presented here is the very fast calculation for a year-long simulation with hourly or shorter time steps taking into account the state of charge or availability of all storage and flexibility technologies. This allows an analysis of many different scenarios on a macro-economic level, variation of input parameters can easily be done, and extensive sensitivity analysis is possible. Furthermore different shares of FRES, CO2-emission targets, interest rates or social acceptance of certain technologies can be included. The capabilities of the method are demonstrated by an analysis of potential German power system layouts with a base scenario of 90% CO2-reduction target compared to 1990 and by the identification of different options for a power sector with a high degree of decarbonisation. The approach also aims at a very high level of transparency both regarding the algorithms and regarding the input parameters of the different technologies taken into account. Therefore this paper also gives a comprehensive and complete overview on the technology parameters used. The forecast on all technologies for the year 2050 regarding technical and economic parameters was made in a comprehensive consultation process with more than 100 experts representing academia and industry working on all different technologies. An extensive analysis of options for the design of potential German energy supply systems in 2050 based on the presented methodology will be published in a follow-up paper.
Die Energiewende erfordert eine neue Energiekultur von Politik, Wissenschaft und Gesellschaft. Der Umstieg auf erneuerbare oder regenerative Energien folgt bislang aber vor allem technologischen und ökonomischen Prämissen. Aus nachhaltiger und vorsorgender Perspektive fehlt die Sorge um und für die Regenerationsfähigkeit der Lebensgrundlagen - auch für zukünftige Generationen. Aufgabe von Politik wäre es, Menschen zu einem regenerativen Umgang mit Energie zu befähigen.
Distributed cogeneration units are flexible and suited to providing balancing power, thereby contributing to the integration of renewable electricity. Against this background, we analysed the technical potential and ecological impact of CHP (combined heat and power) systems on the German minutes reserve market for 2010, 2020 and 2030. Typical CHP plants (from 1 to 2800 kWel) were evaluated in relation to typical buildings or supply cases in different sectors. The minutes reserve potential was determined by an optimisation model with a temporal resolution of 15 min. The results were scaled up to national level using a scenario analysis for the future development of CHP. Additionally, the extent to which three different flexibility measures (double plant size/fourfold storage volume/emergency cooler) increase the potential provision of balancing power was examined. Key findings demonstrate that distributed CHP could contribute significantly to the provision of minutes reserve in future decades. Flexibility options would further enhance the theoretical potential. The grid-orientated operating mode slightly increases CO2 emissions compared to the heat-orientated mode, but it is still preferable to the separate generation of heat and power. However, the impacts of a flexible mode depend greatly on the application and power-to-heat ratio of the individual CHP system.
A key factor to energy-efficiency of heating in buildings is the behavior of households, in particular how they ventilate rooms. Energy demand can be reduced by behavioral change; devices can support this by giving feedback to consumers on their behavior. One such feedback device, called the "CO2 meter", shows indoor air-quality in the colors of a traffic light to motivate so called "shock ventilation", which is energy-efficient ventilation behavior. The following effects of the "CO2 meter" are analyzed: (1) the effect of the device on ventilation behavior within households, (2) the diffusion of "CO2 meter" to other households, and (3) the diffusion of changed behavior to households that do not adopt a "CO2 meter". An agent-based model of these processes for the city of Bottrop (Germany) was developed using a variety of data sources. The model shows that the "CO2 meter" would increase adoption of energy-efficient ventilation by c. 12% and reduce heating demand by c. 1% within 15 years. Technology diffusion was found to explain at least c. 54% of the estimated energy savings; behavior diffusion explains up to 46%. These findings indicate that the "CO2 meter" is an interesting low-cost solution to increase the energy-efficiency in residential heating.
Facing the uncertainty of CO2 storage capacity in China by developing different storage scenarios
(2016)
China is very active in the research and development of CO2 capture and storage technologies (CCS). However, existing estimates for CO2 storage capacity are very uncertain. This uncertainty is due to limited geological knowledge, a lack of large-scale research on CO2 injection, and different assessment approaches and parameter settings. Hence storage scenarios represent a method that can be used by policy makers to demonstrate the range of possible storage capacity developments, to help interpret uncertain results and to identify the limitations of existing assessments. In this paper, three storage scenarios are developed for China by evaluating China-wide studies supplemented with more detailed site- and basin-specific assessments. It is estimated that the greatest storage potential can be found in deep saline aquifers. Oil and gas fields may also be used. Coal seams are only included in the highest storage scenario. In total, the scenarios presented demonstrate that China has an effective storage capacity of between 65 and 1551 Gt of CO2. Furthermore, the authors emphasise a need for action to harmonise storage capacity assessment approaches due to the uncertainties involved in the capacity assessments analysed in this study.