Abstract

Industrial energy efficiency is important for reducing CO2 emissions and could be a competitive advantage for companies because it can reduce costs. However, cost-effective energy efficiency measures are not always implemented because there are barriers inhibiting their implementation. Drivers for energy efficiency could provide means for overcoming these barriers. The aim of this article was to study the importance of different barriers to and drivers for improved energy efficiency in the Swedish aluminium industry and foundries that cast aluminium. Additionally, the perceived usefulness of different information sources on energy efficiency measures was studied. The data were collected through a questionnaire covering 39 barriers and 48 drivers, divided into different categories. Both the aluminium and foundry industries considered technological and economic barriers as the most important categories. The most important category of drivers for the aluminium industry was organisational drivers, while the foundries rated economic drivers as the most important. Colleagues within the company, the company group and sector, and the trade organisation were considered the most useful information sources. Important factors for driving work with improved energy efficiency included access to knowledge within the company, having a culture within the company promoting energy efficiency, and networking within the sector. The policy implications identified included energy labelling of production equipment, the law on energy audit in large companies and subsidy for energy audits in small- and medium-sized companies, voluntary agreements that included long-term energy strategies, increased taxes to improve the cost-effectiveness of energy efficiency measures, and EUs Emission Trading System.

Highlights

  • The Paris Agreement aims for a maximum increase of well below 2 ◦C in the global average temperature compared to pre-industrial levels, with efforts to limit this increase to 1.5 ◦C [1]

  • Nine respondents agreed that such energy efficiency measures existed, and one respondent was neutral

  • This verified that there was an energy efficiency gap in both the aluminium industry and the foundries, which answered the first research question and made it worth studying the rest of the research questions

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Summary

Introduction

The Paris Agreement aims for a maximum increase of well below 2 ◦C in the global average temperature compared to pre-industrial levels, with efforts to limit this increase to 1.5 ◦C [1]. Previous research has shown that cost-effective energy efficiency measures are not always implemented in industry [4,5,6,7,8]. This implies the existence of an energy efficiency gap [4,6,7,8], which is the difference between the optimal and actual implementation of energy efficiency measures [5,8]

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