Addressing the urban energy challenge: The role of distributed thermal storage in future low carbon city energy systems

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Title
Addressing the urban energy challenge: The role of distributed thermal storage in future low carbon city energy systems

CoPED ID
2a40d2d4-8629-47a1-a0e5-5caf97dedebe

Status
Closed


Value
No funds listed.

Start Date
Sept. 30, 2017

End Date
Sept. 30, 2021

Description

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This project will seek to understand how thermal energy storage technologies can be deployed within the future energy system and help to address the trilemma of providing clean, cheap and secure energy. To date, much of the focus in decarbonising the UK's energy system has been on electricity. However, the challenge cannot be addressed without tackling the 40% of final energy demand for heating which accounts for 20% of UK carbon emissions.

The trend to urbanisation is clear and unequivocal. In the UK around 80% of the population already lives in cities and they are responsible for the vast majority of carbon emissions. Globally cities are already responsible for 75% of energy consumption and with 1.5 million people moving to urban areas every week, they are a vital part of the fundamental energy transformation that will be required between now and 2050.

The project will develop our understanding of the potential deployment configurations and applications for decentralised heat storage within the urban environment, by investigating:

- How thermal storage can balance the interface between urban heat and electricity systems
- How future electricity grid decarbonisation will change the way energy is used for heating and cooling including the expansion of heat pump technology
- How thermal storage can help mitigate the impact of increased demands for low carbon electricity for heating
- How the use of waste heat from urban systems can be maximised through integrating thermal storage with district heating and cooling

Cities can be thought of as complex systems and to better understand the interacting elements and emergent behaviours of the system, complexity-based tools and techniques will be employed which recognise the importance and interaction of social, technological, economic and environmental aspects of urban energy systems. A number of detailed case studies will be developed with which to model the application of thermal storage at a range of scales.

Alice Owen SUPER_PER
Peter Taylor SUPER_PER
Catherine Bale SUPER_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Emissions
  2. Towns and cities
  3. Urbanisation
  4. Greenhouse gases
  5. Climate changes
  6. District heating
  7. Heating systems
  8. Energy consumption (energy technology)
  9. Energy technology
  10. Warehousing
  11. Heat energy
  12. Urban design
  13. Energy policy
  14. Environmental effects
  15. Carbon dioxide

Extracted key phrases
  1. Future low carbon city energy system
  2. Thermal energy storage technology
  3. Urban energy system
  4. Future energy system
  5. Urban energy challenge
  6. Final energy demand
  7. Urban system
  8. Fundamental energy transformation
  9. Secure energy
  10. Energy consumption
  11. Way energy
  12. Thermal storage
  13. Electricity system
  14. Decentralised heat storage
  15. Urban heat

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations