Something is sustainable in the state of Denmark: A review of the Danish district heating sector

Katinka Johansen*, Sven Werner

*Kontaktforfatter

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReview (oversigtsartikel)peer review

37 Citationer (Scopus)
409 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

This paper provides a coherent review of district heating in Denmark, exploring past, present and future perspectives. Danish district heating is known as unique internationally in terms of heat planning strategies, technical solutions and combinations, energy efficiency and sustainability, ownership models and financing, and it has captured the attention of district heating communities and stakeholders worldwide from the early days. Historically, a ban on landfills incentivised waste incineration, and the strategic integration of combined heat and power plants and recycling of waste heat from industry all increased energy efficiency in the energy system. Ultimately, this contributed to the top World Energy Council ranking of the Danish energy system according to the energy trilemma criteria. A cooperative mind-set, welfare state values and the notions of energy efficiency-, availability-, independency- and sustainability were all pivotal for the evolution of the district heating networks throughout Denmark. Other unique features of the Danish district heating sector include large-scale collective heat planning, the mandatory connection, the non-profit principle, the same approximate price for customers irrespective of heat density, and the relatively high average price of district heating. Moreover, district heating knowledge hubs have led to world-wide exports of district heating technologies and know-how. Future challenges for the Danish district heating sector include increasing biomass import dependency, the changing role of combined heat and power plants in the energy system, transitions to non-combustion heat supplies, and competition from individual heat pumps in single-family houses. However, future ‘smart’ thermal grids will increasingly facilitate sector coupling processes as more renewable energy resources are integrated into the energy system in Denmark and internationally.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummer112117
TidsskriftRenewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews
Vol/bind158
ISSN1364-0321
DOI
StatusUdgivet - apr. 2022

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
This paper is a part of the project InterHUB, financed by Aalborg University, (see InterHUB.aau.dk). Thanks to Danfoss, Affaldvarme Aarhus, the OOA Archives, and the Danish Energy Agency for providing the illustrations in Figs. 1, 2, 5 and 6, respectively. Many thanks to all the people who shared their insights, knowledge and perspectives along the way. Thanks also to colleagues and friends for their support.

Funding Information:
This paper is a part of the project InterHUB, financed by Aalborg University , (see InterHUB.aau.dk). Thanks to Danfoss, Affaldvarme Aarhus, the OOA Archives, and the Danish Energy Agency for providing the illustrations in Figs. 1, 2, 5 and 6 , respectively. Many thanks to all the people who shared their insights, knowledge and perspectives along the way. Thanks also to colleagues and friends for their support.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022

Emneord

  • Denmark
  • District heating
  • Energy transition
  • Heat planning
  • Review

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