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Implementing large-scale heating infrastructures: experiences from successful planning of district heating and natural gas grids in Denmark, the United Kingdom, and the Netherlands

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Abstract

Large-scale heating infrastructures in the form of district heating have significant potentials to increase energy efficiency and integrate renewables in line with the Paris Agreement and EU targets. Such infrastructures face challenges due to high investment costs, monopoly situations, regulation, and ownership and are often not supported by status-quo market regimes. This paper investigates how Denmark, the United Kingdom, and the Netherlands achieved high market shares in their heat supply using large-scale infrastructures between 1950 and 1980. The analysis investigates the drivers, actors, organizations, ownership models, financing, policy, and regulation that was involved in implementing these large-scale infrastructures. The findings illustrate how global events such as the oil crisis in 1973 promoted the need for concerted action. The infrastructures were realized through significant government intervention, coordinated work including repurposing existing infrastructure and actors, deploying new regulations, subsidies, and business models. The conclusions reflect on contemporary heat transitions towards renewable energy supply and how historical lessons are relevant for socio-technical transitions today. New heating infrastructures in the form of district heating should be built according to the specific local conditions, through a combination of government support, new regulatory tools, appropriate business models for recirculating funds into new investments, and by engaging existing actors into developing the new supply systems. Achieving high market shares of large-scale heating infrastructures is not business as usual, but requires significant adjustments in all aspects of energy systems.

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Adapted from Correlje and Odell (2000)

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Notes

  1. While district heating end-uses are limited to space heating and domestic hot water consumption in residences, natural gas can also be used for cooking and lighting.

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Acknowledgements

We thank the Horizon 2020 Hotmaps project (Grant Agreement number 723677) for partial funding of this work. We also thank the anonymous reviewers for their constructive feedback and comments.

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Conceptualization: Nis Bertelsen, Brian Vad Mathiesen; methodology: Nis Bertelsen; formal analysis: Nis Bertelsen; data curation: Nis Bertelsen, Susana Paardekooper; writing—original draft preparation: Nis Bertelsen, Susana Paardekooper; writing—review and editing: Nis Bertelsen, Susana Paardekooper, Brian Vad Mathiesen; visualization: Nis Bertelsen; funding acquisition: Brian Vad Mathiesen; supervision: Brian Vad Mathiesen. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

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Correspondence to Nis Bertelsen.

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The authors declare no competing interests.

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The funders had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript; or in the decision to publish the results.

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Bertelsen, N., Paardekooper, S. & Mathiesen, B.V. Implementing large-scale heating infrastructures: experiences from successful planning of district heating and natural gas grids in Denmark, the United Kingdom, and the Netherlands. Energy Efficiency 14, 64 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12053-021-09975-8

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