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Journal article

Economic incentives for flexible district heating in the nordic countries

From

Systems Analysis, Department of Management Engineering, Technical University of Denmark1

Department of Management Engineering, Technical University of Denmark2

Norwegian University of Life Sciences3

By analysing four types of district heating plants, ranging from fully integrated with an electricity system (combined heat and power and electric boiler) to no integration with an electricity system (wood chip boiler), operation and investment incentives for flexible district heating plants under current Danish, Finnish, Norwegian and Swedish framework conditions have been investigated.

Hourly-based operation optimisation over 20 years using the modelling software energyPRO showed that the largest investment incentive in Finland, Norway and Sweden was for combined heat and power with an electric boiler. This is largely driven by subsidies. Conversely, the less-subsidised Danish case incentivised investment in wood chip boilers.

Untaxed biomass is the major energy source in all scenarios, while electricity use is limited. Capacity component-based tariffs can eliminate operation of electric boilers, while less costly energy component-based tariffs can increase the operation of electric boilers. Heat storage was found to be a no-regrets solution for optimising operation and lowering costs in all cases.

Language: English
Publisher: Aalborg University Open Publishing
Year: 2018
Pages: 27-44
ISSN: 22462929
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.5278/ijsepm.2018.16.3
ORCIDs: Sneum, Daniel Møller

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