大户型的最佳供暖

S. Gustafsson, M. Rönnqvist
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引用次数: 23

摘要

如今,大量的公寓楼经常连接到市政区域供热网。大约50年前,这种系统在瑞典非常流行。其原因是,能源市场上有大量廉价的劣质石油,但普通的建筑业主无法在自己的低成本燃油锅炉中使用这种石油。他们不得不使用更好、更贵的油来取暖。在区域供热厂,劣质廉价的油可以在复杂但昂贵的锅炉中燃烧。这样的工厂也足够大,可以负担得起其他设备的投资,例如减少硫。此外,市政当局看到了他们摆脱许多其他热源的机会,如煤炭和木材,这些热源污染了许多居民的空气。一个又高又大的烟囱总比成千上万个小的要好。多年来,重油一直是我们地区供热厂的主要燃料。不幸的是,石油的使用使瑞典的贸易平衡出现问题,该国容易受到能源市场波动的影响。20世纪70年代的石油危机使情况更加糟糕。瑞典必须摆脱对石油和基于其他燃料的区域供热的依赖,甚至是电力,只要有替代品。环境危害、高价格和减少温室气体排放的义务导致了工厂的现代化,如今,许多能源正在使用中,其中许多价格非常具有竞争力。如今,废物、垃圾、破旧的橡胶轮胎、毁坏的木制建筑都被用作燃料。然而,也有缺点。垃圾焚烧锅炉和设备是昂贵的设备,很多时候不可能满足全部的热量需求,利用垃圾等作为唯一的来源。浪费的数量也可能太小。有时在高峰时期必须使用煤和石油,但税收和排放配额使这些燃料变得昂贵,公用事业公司尽力避免使用这些化石热源。如果有可能在峰值出现时减少需求,就可以避免使用化石燃料。到目前为止,正常的瑞典区域供热关税被认为不会鼓励这种行为,但正如这项研究表明的那样,对业主来说,最便宜的解决方案是在冬季多次放弃区域供热,并使用其他解决方案。公用事业公司当然也想在冬天出售区域供热,但如果业主想尽可能地降低成本,区域供热税告诉他们只在夏天使用公用事业公司的供热。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Optimal Heating of Large Block of Flats
Large number of block of flats are today often connected to municipal district heating grids. Such systems became very popular in Sweden some fifty years ago. The reason for this was that cheap low-quality oil was abundant on the energy market but normal building owners could not use it in their own low-cost oil-fired boilers. They had to use better and more expensive oil for their heating purposes. In a district heating plant low-quality cheap oil could be burnt in a sophisticated, but expensive, boiler. Such a plant was also large enough to afford investments in other equipment, e.g. for sulphur reduction. Further, the municipalities saw their chance to get rid of many other sources of heat, such as coal and wood, which polluted the air for many inhabitants. It was better with one high and large chimney than thousands of small. During many years heavy oil was the dominant fuel in our district heating plants. Unfortunately, the use of oil made the trade balance of Sweden problematic and the country vulnerable to fluctuations on the energy market. The oil-crises during the 1970-ties made the situation even worse. Sweden had to get rid of the dependence of oil and district heating based on other fuels, or even electricity, where available alternatives. Environmental hazards, high prices and the obligation to reduce greenhouse gas emissions have led to modernisation of the plants and nowadays, a number of energy sources are in use, many of them with very competitive prices. Waste, garbage, worn out rubber tyres, demolished wooden buildings are used as fuels today. There are however drawbacks. Boilers and equipment for waste incineration are expensive devices and it is many times not possible to cover the total heat demand by use of garbage etc., as the only sources. The amount of waste might also be too small. Sometimes coal and oil must be used during peak conditions but taxes and emission allowances make such fuels expensive and the utilities try to do their best in order to avoid such fossil heat sources. If it was possible to reduce the demand when peak conditions emerge, fossil fuels could be avoided. Up to now, normal Swedish district heating tariffs were not thought to encourage such a behaviour, but as this study shows, the cheapest solution for a proprietor is many times to abandon district heating during the winter and use alternative solutions. The utilities of course want to sell district heat also during the winter but if the building owners want to reduce their costs as much as possible the district heating tariff tells them to use heat from the utility only during summer.
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