Contracts, Business Models and Barriers to Investing in Low Temperature District Heating Projects

Approximately 1.2 EJ of energy are potentially available for recovery each year from urban heat sources in the EU. This corresponds to more than 10 percent of the EU’s total energy demand for heat and hot water. There are, however, a number of challenges to be met before urban waste heat r...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kristina Lygnerud, Edward Wheatcroft, Henry Wynn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-08-01
Series:Applied Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/9/15/3142
id doaj-1e549774641942aeb8148dae0f76bc93
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1e549774641942aeb8148dae0f76bc932020-11-24T21:30:42ZengMDPI AGApplied Sciences2076-34172019-08-01915314210.3390/app9153142app9153142Contracts, Business Models and Barriers to Investing in Low Temperature District Heating ProjectsKristina Lygnerud0Edward Wheatcroft1Henry Wynn2IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute, Göteborg, 41133, SwedenCentre for the Analysis of Time Series, London School of Economics, London, WC2A 2AE, UKCentre for the Analysis of Time Series, London School of Economics, London, WC2A 2AE, UKApproximately 1.2 EJ of energy are potentially available for recovery each year from urban heat sources in the EU. This corresponds to more than 10 percent of the EU’s total energy demand for heat and hot water. There are, however, a number of challenges to be met before urban waste heat recovery can be performed on a wide scale. This paper focuses on the non-technical issues related to urban waste heat recovery and is written on the basis of opinions gathered from stakeholders in the field. Three non-technical issues are focused upon. First, a number of important barriers to wide scale urban waste recovery are identified, and where applicable, recommendations are made regarding how to overcome these barriers. Second, important issues and challenges regarding contract design are identified and discussed. Key elements of heat supply contracts between the district heating company and the owner of the waste heat are described. Finally, the impact on business models of properties specific to urban waste heat recovery are discussed. Data were collected from two separate sources, both related to the ReUseHeat Horizon 2020 project, which addresses the application of urban waste heat recovery in existing district heating networks. First, a number of interviews with stakeholders were carried out. Second, information was collected from demonstrator sites involved in the ReUseHeat project. It was concluded that, for urban waste heat recovery to be taken up on a wide scale, there is still a large amount of work to do to overcome these major issues. This paper is novel in that key non-technical issues of urban waste heat recovery are discussed from the perspective of a large sample of actual stakeholders and practitioners in the field.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/9/15/3142urban waste heat recoverybarrierscontractsbusiness models
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kristina Lygnerud
Edward Wheatcroft
Henry Wynn
spellingShingle Kristina Lygnerud
Edward Wheatcroft
Henry Wynn
Contracts, Business Models and Barriers to Investing in Low Temperature District Heating Projects
Applied Sciences
urban waste heat recovery
barriers
contracts
business models
author_facet Kristina Lygnerud
Edward Wheatcroft
Henry Wynn
author_sort Kristina Lygnerud
title Contracts, Business Models and Barriers to Investing in Low Temperature District Heating Projects
title_short Contracts, Business Models and Barriers to Investing in Low Temperature District Heating Projects
title_full Contracts, Business Models and Barriers to Investing in Low Temperature District Heating Projects
title_fullStr Contracts, Business Models and Barriers to Investing in Low Temperature District Heating Projects
title_full_unstemmed Contracts, Business Models and Barriers to Investing in Low Temperature District Heating Projects
title_sort contracts, business models and barriers to investing in low temperature district heating projects
publisher MDPI AG
series Applied Sciences
issn 2076-3417
publishDate 2019-08-01
description Approximately 1.2 EJ of energy are potentially available for recovery each year from urban heat sources in the EU. This corresponds to more than 10 percent of the EU’s total energy demand for heat and hot water. There are, however, a number of challenges to be met before urban waste heat recovery can be performed on a wide scale. This paper focuses on the non-technical issues related to urban waste heat recovery and is written on the basis of opinions gathered from stakeholders in the field. Three non-technical issues are focused upon. First, a number of important barriers to wide scale urban waste recovery are identified, and where applicable, recommendations are made regarding how to overcome these barriers. Second, important issues and challenges regarding contract design are identified and discussed. Key elements of heat supply contracts between the district heating company and the owner of the waste heat are described. Finally, the impact on business models of properties specific to urban waste heat recovery are discussed. Data were collected from two separate sources, both related to the ReUseHeat Horizon 2020 project, which addresses the application of urban waste heat recovery in existing district heating networks. First, a number of interviews with stakeholders were carried out. Second, information was collected from demonstrator sites involved in the ReUseHeat project. It was concluded that, for urban waste heat recovery to be taken up on a wide scale, there is still a large amount of work to do to overcome these major issues. This paper is novel in that key non-technical issues of urban waste heat recovery are discussed from the perspective of a large sample of actual stakeholders and practitioners in the field.
topic urban waste heat recovery
barriers
contracts
business models
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/9/15/3142
work_keys_str_mv AT kristinalygnerud contractsbusinessmodelsandbarrierstoinvestinginlowtemperaturedistrictheatingprojects
AT edwardwheatcroft contractsbusinessmodelsandbarrierstoinvestinginlowtemperaturedistrictheatingprojects
AT henrywynn contractsbusinessmodelsandbarrierstoinvestinginlowtemperaturedistrictheatingprojects
_version_ 1725962196855291904