Abstract

This paper deals with climate change mitigation and addresses waste heat reuse as a measure which is until now considered only to a limited extent. The City of Vienna serves as a case study to explore potentials to improve the urban heat supply using waste heat as an additional energy source. As no observation data about waste heat and detailed heating demand is available, this data is derived from proxy data for estimating waste heat reuse potential and residential heating demand patterns. Heat requirements for manufacturing and service provision is explored and, based on the distribution of the companies within the city, mapped as waste heat sources. Employees per company serves as proxy data to allocate the heat volume. Waste heat share and temperature ranges is reviewed from literature. Heating demand is mapped based on floor space of the buildings by age class and building type. Merging supply and demand maps allows to quantify the residential heating demand coverage through local waste heat in the potential supply areas within different distance ranges and housing density classes. In high density housing areas, only a small share of the demand can be covered by waste heat supply even within 250 m distance from sources due to few companies which could provide waste heat. In medium to low density housing areas in Vienna’s outer districts with more industry, a higher share of residential heating demand near the sources can be covered by waste heat within a 250 m distance. Within a 500 m distance, around half of the residential heating demand can be covered only in low density housing areas near the waste heat sources.

Highlights

  • Climate change is triggered through accelerated greenhouse gas (GHG) emission into the atmosphere

  • Reducing GHG requires a change of energy consumption and supply towards alternative energy carriers, moving from fossil fuel supplies to renewable energy sources [1]

  • There exist various demonstration projects on urban district heating system improvement, as shown by the EU-FP7 project CELSIUS where the Consortium Cities are deploying 12 technically and economically innovative demonstrations [5] or by UNEP’s District Energy Report describing a collection of 45 case studies [6]. They usually deal with single demonstration projects like waste incineration, sewage waste heat recovery, combined heat and power (CHP)-plants or similar, but do not deal with distributed industrial and commercial waste heat use in an entire city

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Summary

Introduction

Climate change is triggered through accelerated greenhouse gas (GHG) emission into the atmosphere. There exist various demonstration projects on urban district heating system improvement, as shown by the EU-FP7 project CELSIUS where the Consortium Cities are deploying 12 technically and economically innovative demonstrations [5] or by UNEP’s District Energy Report describing a collection of 45 case studies [6]. They usually deal with single demonstration projects like waste incineration, sewage waste heat recovery, combined heat and power (CHP)-plants or similar, but do not deal with distributed industrial and commercial waste heat use in an entire city

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