Historical Evolution and Scenarios Up to 2050 of Heating Energy Consumption and CO2 Emissions of Residential Buildings in Vienna

Q4 Energy
R. Haas, A. Ajanovic, J. Lederer, Marina Siebenhofer
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Abstract

Today, the building sector poses a major problem concerning fossil fuel energy consumption and the corresponding emissions of local pollutants and global greenhouse gases (GHG). In addition, an increasing number of people are living in urban areas, and it is becoming challenging to provide the necessary living space and energy for heating in fast-growing cities. Currently, urban areas host approximately 50 % of the global population and generate 70 % of GHG. The core objective of this study is to analyze the historical development and to derive scenarios for the possible future development of the overall CO2 emissions in residential buildings in Vienna up to the year 2050, considering all relevant emissions from final energy, as well as the embedded emissions from the construction of new buildings, retrofitting, and rooftop apartment extensions. This study indicates the following key points: (i) The renovation of buildings by improving the thermal quality is the most favorable scenario strategy and produces the least CO2 emissions. (ii) The transition to the sustainable heating of buildings requires at least a temporary "investment" in embedded CO2 emission, e.g., in retrofitting and insulation of buildings to harvest reductions in CO2 emissions in the long run, from a smaller amount of energy used for heating. The major conclusions of this study are as follows: (i) To implement the most favorable renovation scenario, strong policy measures are required, such as standards for new buildings and for building retrofitting, as well as subsidies to ensure an accelerated refurbishment rate of the old low thermal building stock. (ii) It is important to reduce the CO2 emission of the final energy carriers, especially of district heating, by increasing the usage of renewable energy carriers such as biomass, solar, and geothermal.
维也纳住宅建筑供暖能耗和二氧化碳排放的历史演变和2050年情景
今天,建筑行业对化石燃料能源消耗以及相应的当地污染物和全球温室气体(GHG)排放提出了一个主要问题。此外,越来越多的人生活在城市地区,为快速发展的城市提供必要的生活空间和供暖能源正变得具有挑战性。目前,城市地区拥有全球约50%的人口,产生70%的温室气体。本研究的核心目标是分析历史发展,并推导出到2050年维也纳住宅建筑总体二氧化碳排放的未来可能发展情景,考虑到最终能源的所有相关排放,以及新建建筑、改造和屋顶公寓扩建的嵌入式排放。研究结果表明:(1)通过改善建筑热质量进行改造是最有利的情景策略,并且产生的CO2排放量最少。向建筑物的可持续供暖过渡至少需要在二氧化碳排放方面进行暂时的“投资”,例如,在建筑物的改造和绝缘方面进行投资,以便从长远来看,从较少的用于供暖的能源中获得二氧化碳排放的减少。本研究的主要结论如下:(i)为实现最有利的翻新方案,需要强有力的政策措施,例如新建筑物和建筑物翻新的标准,以及补贴,以确保旧的低热量建筑库存加快翻新速度。必须通过增加使用诸如生物量、太阳能和地热等可再生能源来减少最终能源载体,特别是区域供热的二氧化碳排放。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Nuclear Energy Science and Power Generation Technology
Journal of Nuclear Energy Science and Power Generation Technology Energy-Energy Engineering and Power Technology
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