Transition towards a sustainable heating and cooling sector - case study of southeast European countries
2019
Many traditional heating systems which are based on fossils face challenges
such as lack of investment or unfavorable price regulations, low technical
performance, environmental impacts and negative consumer perceptions. The
CoolHeating project which is, funded by the EU’s Horizon 2020 programme and
presented in this paper promotes the implementation of small modular
renewable heating and cooling grids for communities in South-Eastern Europe.
Core project activities bincluded measures to stimulate the interest of
communities and citizens to set-up renewable district heating systems in 5
target communities in Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia and
Macedonia up to the investment stage. Single criteria and multi-criteria
assessment approaches, considering economic, environmental and social
indicators of the targeted projects, have been applied in this work in order
to investigate opportunities for the sustainable transition of the heating
and cooling sectors of the target communities of Southeast Europe. Both
approaches confirm the feasibilities of the transition from traditional to
renewable energy-based heating systems for each target community in the
countries of South-Eastern Europe. After simulation and replication of the
results, the sustainability analysis indicatively shows that the transitions
from traditional fossil-based, poor-maintained and difficult-to-manage
heating systems towards renewable district heating and cooling (DHC) systems
in Southeast Europe are sustainable solutions. Having in mind the modularity
of such systems, those solutions can be replicated in other Southeast
European cities and other countries.
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