Abstract

Reducing fuel use for the heating of houses is key to meeting greenhouse gas emission reduction targets. This study constructs Marginal Abatement Cost Curves (MACC) of different technologies for space and water heating of houses in the county of Gwynedd in Wales, UK, and uses information provided by energy certificates to correctly assess the energy requirements of a house. This approach allows us to accurately predict energy consumption and identify potential ways to reduce demand. We then explore the costs and savings of a switch from systems using conventional heating fuel (e.g., gas, electricity, oil, LPG, and coal) to low-carbon technology such as PV, biomass boilers and heat pumps. Solar PV was the low-carbon heating technology found to be most cost-effective per tonne of emissions abated (£/t CO2). A reduction in capital costs of low-carbon technologies could potentially make technologies such as heat pumps be cost-effective. Without any policy intervention, low investment and fuel cost of gas would make replacement with any low-carbon technology uneconomical. Emission savings in Gwynedd over 30-year period could be between 3.494 and 5.289 Mt CO2 if appropriate measures which cater towards reducing capital costs and/or incentivising the uptake of technology are adopted.

Highlights

  • Energy use in households for space and water heating is responsible for a large portion of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions

  • Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) are calculated according to Standard Assessment Procedure (SAP), which standardises the assumption for occupancy and behaviour to facilitate comparison between dwellings

  • If the existing trend of uptake of mitigation technology continues without any policy changes, 3.4 Mt CO2 could be saved over the 30-year period

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Summary

Introduction

Energy use in households for space and water heating is responsible for a large portion of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Under the Environment (Wales) Act 2016, the Welsh Government is required to reduce GHG emissions in Wales by 80% by 2050 (compared to 1990 levels) [65]. Key to meeting this target is to reduce the energy usage associated with households. Even before the introduction of the Environment (Wales) Act 2016, the Welsh and UK governments had introduced a variety of programmes to reduce the contribution of buildings to GHG emissions, by incentivising the renovation of existing homes to improve energy efficiency, and by financing renewable energy solutions.

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