Economic Aspects of Fuel Cell-Based Stationary Energy Systems

It is evident that human activity has an important impact on climate. Constantly increasing energy demand is one of the biggest causes of climate change. The fifth assessment report of the Inter-governmental panel on climate change states that decarbonisation of electricity generation is a key compo...

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Main Author: Sevencan, Suat
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: KTH, Tillämpad elektrokemi 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-179137
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7595-754-8
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-kth-1791372015-12-11T04:56:55ZEconomic Aspects of Fuel Cell-Based Stationary Energy SystemsengSevencan, SuatKTH, Tillämpad elektrokemiStockholm2016Fuel cellsniche marketstationary applicationsfeasibilitymulti-generationIt is evident that human activity has an important impact on climate. Constantly increasing energy demand is one of the biggest causes of climate change. The fifth assessment report of the Inter-governmental panel on climate change states that decarbonisation of electricity generation is a key component of climate change mitigation. Increased awareness of this fact and escalating concerns around energy security has brought public attention to the energy industry, especially sustainable power generation systems. Future energy systems may need to include hydrogen as an energy carrier in order to achieve necessary levels of CO2 emission reductions, and overcome the challenges renewable energy systems present. Fuel cells could be a corner stone of future hydrogen inclusive energy solutions. New solutions like fuel cells have to compete with existing technologies and overcome the shortcomings of emerging technology. Though these shortcomings are well-recognised, fuel cells also have many advantages which makes continued research and development in the field highly worthwhile and viable. Key to their adoption is the identification of a niche market to utilise their advantages while overcoming their shortcomings with continuous research and development. This thesis aims to evaluate some of the stationary fuel cell applications and determine whether one could become the niche market as an entry point for fuel cells. This is achieved by economic evaluations of real and hypothetical applications. Results of the studies here imply that to decrease the total life cycle impacts of fuel cells to more acceptable levels, resource use in the manufacturing phase and recycling in decommissioning should be shown more attention. Results also present a picture showing that none of the applications investigated are economically feasible, given the current state of technology and energy prices. However, fuel cell-based combined cooling, heating and power systems for data centres show the potential to become the niche market that fuel cells need to grow. A further conclusion is that a broad market, longer stack lifetime, the possibility of selling electricity back to the grid and governmental subsidies are essential components of an environment in which fuel cells can permeate through the niche market to the mainstream markets. <p>QC 20151210</p>Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-179137urn:isbn:978-91-7595-754-8TRITA-CHE-Report, 1654-1081 ; 2016:1application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Fuel cells
niche market
stationary applications
feasibility
multi-generation
spellingShingle Fuel cells
niche market
stationary applications
feasibility
multi-generation
Sevencan, Suat
Economic Aspects of Fuel Cell-Based Stationary Energy Systems
description It is evident that human activity has an important impact on climate. Constantly increasing energy demand is one of the biggest causes of climate change. The fifth assessment report of the Inter-governmental panel on climate change states that decarbonisation of electricity generation is a key component of climate change mitigation. Increased awareness of this fact and escalating concerns around energy security has brought public attention to the energy industry, especially sustainable power generation systems. Future energy systems may need to include hydrogen as an energy carrier in order to achieve necessary levels of CO2 emission reductions, and overcome the challenges renewable energy systems present. Fuel cells could be a corner stone of future hydrogen inclusive energy solutions. New solutions like fuel cells have to compete with existing technologies and overcome the shortcomings of emerging technology. Though these shortcomings are well-recognised, fuel cells also have many advantages which makes continued research and development in the field highly worthwhile and viable. Key to their adoption is the identification of a niche market to utilise their advantages while overcoming their shortcomings with continuous research and development. This thesis aims to evaluate some of the stationary fuel cell applications and determine whether one could become the niche market as an entry point for fuel cells. This is achieved by economic evaluations of real and hypothetical applications. Results of the studies here imply that to decrease the total life cycle impacts of fuel cells to more acceptable levels, resource use in the manufacturing phase and recycling in decommissioning should be shown more attention. Results also present a picture showing that none of the applications investigated are economically feasible, given the current state of technology and energy prices. However, fuel cell-based combined cooling, heating and power systems for data centres show the potential to become the niche market that fuel cells need to grow. A further conclusion is that a broad market, longer stack lifetime, the possibility of selling electricity back to the grid and governmental subsidies are essential components of an environment in which fuel cells can permeate through the niche market to the mainstream markets. === <p>QC 20151210</p>
author Sevencan, Suat
author_facet Sevencan, Suat
author_sort Sevencan, Suat
title Economic Aspects of Fuel Cell-Based Stationary Energy Systems
title_short Economic Aspects of Fuel Cell-Based Stationary Energy Systems
title_full Economic Aspects of Fuel Cell-Based Stationary Energy Systems
title_fullStr Economic Aspects of Fuel Cell-Based Stationary Energy Systems
title_full_unstemmed Economic Aspects of Fuel Cell-Based Stationary Energy Systems
title_sort economic aspects of fuel cell-based stationary energy systems
publisher KTH, Tillämpad elektrokemi
publishDate 2016
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-179137
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7595-754-8
work_keys_str_mv AT sevencansuat economicaspectsoffuelcellbasedstationaryenergysystems
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