EU-28 Residential Heat Supply and Consumption: Historical Development and Status

EU is moving towards a climate neutrality goal in 2050 with heating of buildings posing a major challenge. This paper provides a deep understanding of the historical development, path dependency and current status of the EU-28 residential heat sectors to inform strategy and policy makers and to open...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nis Bertelsen, Brian Vad Mathiesen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-04-01
Series:Energies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/8/1894
id doaj-ba1bfb4e5a4f46128341742b281cce82
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ba1bfb4e5a4f46128341742b281cce822020-11-25T02:23:40ZengMDPI AGEnergies1996-10732020-04-01131894189410.3390/en13081894EU-28 Residential Heat Supply and Consumption: Historical Development and StatusNis Bertelsen0Brian Vad Mathiesen1Department of Planning, Aalborg University, 2450 Copenhagen, DenmarkDepartment of Planning, Aalborg University, 2450 Copenhagen, DenmarkEU is moving towards a climate neutrality goal in 2050 with heating of buildings posing a major challenge. This paper provides a deep understanding of the historical development, path dependency and current status of the EU-28 residential heat sectors to inform strategy and policy makers and to open up this black box. Data is combined for buildings, installed technologies, fuel consumption and energy supply for Member States from 1990 to 2015, to analyse the importance of large-scale infrastructures and supply chains. Primary energy supply for residential heating is mainly based on fossil fuels; 70% in 2015 with 69% imported. The building level technologies are dominated by non-condensing boilers and stoves. Primary and final energy consumption decreased in spite of an increase in the total occupied living area in most countries. Path-dependency effects are found in the residential heat supply in EU. The analysis show path-dependent trajectories are present in most Member States, especially regarding natural gas infrastructure. The period shows many options for decarbonisation are not used to the full potential, e.g., energy efficiency in buildings, district heating, heat pumps. Past experiences should be considered when developing new decarbonisation strategies in Member States and on the EU level.https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/8/1894residential heat supplyheatdecarbonisationEU-28supply chainenergy efficiency
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nis Bertelsen
Brian Vad Mathiesen
spellingShingle Nis Bertelsen
Brian Vad Mathiesen
EU-28 Residential Heat Supply and Consumption: Historical Development and Status
Energies
residential heat supply
heat
decarbonisation
EU-28
supply chain
energy efficiency
author_facet Nis Bertelsen
Brian Vad Mathiesen
author_sort Nis Bertelsen
title EU-28 Residential Heat Supply and Consumption: Historical Development and Status
title_short EU-28 Residential Heat Supply and Consumption: Historical Development and Status
title_full EU-28 Residential Heat Supply and Consumption: Historical Development and Status
title_fullStr EU-28 Residential Heat Supply and Consumption: Historical Development and Status
title_full_unstemmed EU-28 Residential Heat Supply and Consumption: Historical Development and Status
title_sort eu-28 residential heat supply and consumption: historical development and status
publisher MDPI AG
series Energies
issn 1996-1073
publishDate 2020-04-01
description EU is moving towards a climate neutrality goal in 2050 with heating of buildings posing a major challenge. This paper provides a deep understanding of the historical development, path dependency and current status of the EU-28 residential heat sectors to inform strategy and policy makers and to open up this black box. Data is combined for buildings, installed technologies, fuel consumption and energy supply for Member States from 1990 to 2015, to analyse the importance of large-scale infrastructures and supply chains. Primary energy supply for residential heating is mainly based on fossil fuels; 70% in 2015 with 69% imported. The building level technologies are dominated by non-condensing boilers and stoves. Primary and final energy consumption decreased in spite of an increase in the total occupied living area in most countries. Path-dependency effects are found in the residential heat supply in EU. The analysis show path-dependent trajectories are present in most Member States, especially regarding natural gas infrastructure. The period shows many options for decarbonisation are not used to the full potential, e.g., energy efficiency in buildings, district heating, heat pumps. Past experiences should be considered when developing new decarbonisation strategies in Member States and on the EU level.
topic residential heat supply
heat
decarbonisation
EU-28
supply chain
energy efficiency
url https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/8/1894
work_keys_str_mv AT nisbertelsen eu28residentialheatsupplyandconsumptionhistoricaldevelopmentandstatus
AT brianvadmathiesen eu28residentialheatsupplyandconsumptionhistoricaldevelopmentandstatus
_version_ 1724858035599310848