How and to which extent can the gas sector contribute to a climate-neutral European energy system? A qualitative approach

Abstract Background Mitigating climate change requires fundamentally redesigned energy systems in which renewable energy sources ultimately replace fossil fuels such as natural gas. In this context, the question how and to which extent the gas sector can contribute to an increasingly climate-neutral...

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Main Authors: Christian Lebelhuber, Horst Steinmüller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-06-01
Series:Energy, Sustainability and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13705-019-0207-2
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spelling doaj-6783225afd31406ba2647f21400cbf6a2020-11-25T02:23:42ZengBMCEnergy, Sustainability and Society2192-05672019-06-019112310.1186/s13705-019-0207-2How and to which extent can the gas sector contribute to a climate-neutral European energy system? A qualitative approachChristian Lebelhuber0Horst Steinmüller1Energy Institute at Johannes Kepler University LinzEnergy Institute at Johannes Kepler University LinzAbstract Background Mitigating climate change requires fundamentally redesigned energy systems in which renewable energy sources ultimately replace fossil fuels such as natural gas. In this context, the question how and to which extent the gas sector can contribute to an increasingly climate-neutral future EU energy system is heavily debated among scholars, energy industry experts, and policy makers. Methods We take a two-step approach: we begin with a review of studies from energy industry and academia to discuss potential gas sector contributions from a holistic energy system design point of view; this is followed by a comprehensive discussion of technical potentials, micro-economic conditions, and societal implications of renewable gas. We then enrich our findings with the results of an empirical focus group process. Results The gas sector can not only contribute to balancing volatile renewable energy production but also enable the supply of renewable energy to end-users in gaseous form; based on existing infrastructure. This could reduce costs for society, increase public acceptance, and ultimately speed up the energy system transformation. There is the theoretical technical potential to substitute major parts of natural gas with renewable gas of biogenic and synthetic nature. This, however, crucially requires a supportive policy framework like the one established for renewable electricity. Conclusion Given the societal benefits and the competitiveness of renewable gas as compared to renewable alternatives, energy policy makers should incorporate renewable gas and the existing gas infrastructure in the future energy system framework. The objective should be an optimized interplay of various energy vectors and their infrastructure along the entire energy supply chain. This requires a level playing field for different renewable technologies across different policy areas and a form of public support that strikes the balance between facilitating the gradual substitution of natural gas by renewable gas while maintaining public acceptance for this transformation despite higher costs for end-users.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13705-019-0207-2Energy systemEnergy policyClimate neutralityRenewable gasBiomethanePower-to-gas
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christian Lebelhuber
Horst Steinmüller
spellingShingle Christian Lebelhuber
Horst Steinmüller
How and to which extent can the gas sector contribute to a climate-neutral European energy system? A qualitative approach
Energy, Sustainability and Society
Energy system
Energy policy
Climate neutrality
Renewable gas
Biomethane
Power-to-gas
author_facet Christian Lebelhuber
Horst Steinmüller
author_sort Christian Lebelhuber
title How and to which extent can the gas sector contribute to a climate-neutral European energy system? A qualitative approach
title_short How and to which extent can the gas sector contribute to a climate-neutral European energy system? A qualitative approach
title_full How and to which extent can the gas sector contribute to a climate-neutral European energy system? A qualitative approach
title_fullStr How and to which extent can the gas sector contribute to a climate-neutral European energy system? A qualitative approach
title_full_unstemmed How and to which extent can the gas sector contribute to a climate-neutral European energy system? A qualitative approach
title_sort how and to which extent can the gas sector contribute to a climate-neutral european energy system? a qualitative approach
publisher BMC
series Energy, Sustainability and Society
issn 2192-0567
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Abstract Background Mitigating climate change requires fundamentally redesigned energy systems in which renewable energy sources ultimately replace fossil fuels such as natural gas. In this context, the question how and to which extent the gas sector can contribute to an increasingly climate-neutral future EU energy system is heavily debated among scholars, energy industry experts, and policy makers. Methods We take a two-step approach: we begin with a review of studies from energy industry and academia to discuss potential gas sector contributions from a holistic energy system design point of view; this is followed by a comprehensive discussion of technical potentials, micro-economic conditions, and societal implications of renewable gas. We then enrich our findings with the results of an empirical focus group process. Results The gas sector can not only contribute to balancing volatile renewable energy production but also enable the supply of renewable energy to end-users in gaseous form; based on existing infrastructure. This could reduce costs for society, increase public acceptance, and ultimately speed up the energy system transformation. There is the theoretical technical potential to substitute major parts of natural gas with renewable gas of biogenic and synthetic nature. This, however, crucially requires a supportive policy framework like the one established for renewable electricity. Conclusion Given the societal benefits and the competitiveness of renewable gas as compared to renewable alternatives, energy policy makers should incorporate renewable gas and the existing gas infrastructure in the future energy system framework. The objective should be an optimized interplay of various energy vectors and their infrastructure along the entire energy supply chain. This requires a level playing field for different renewable technologies across different policy areas and a form of public support that strikes the balance between facilitating the gradual substitution of natural gas by renewable gas while maintaining public acceptance for this transformation despite higher costs for end-users.
topic Energy system
Energy policy
Climate neutrality
Renewable gas
Biomethane
Power-to-gas
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13705-019-0207-2
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