| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5477247 | Energy | 2016 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
The need for deep decarbonisation in the energy intensive basic materials industry is increasingly recognised. In light of the vast future potential for renewable electricity the implications of electrifying the production of basic materials in the European Union is explored in a what-if thought-experiment. Production of steel, cement, glass, lime, petrochemicals, chlorine and ammonia required 125Â TW-hours of electricity and 851Â TW-hours of fossil fuels for energetic purposes and 671Â TW-hours of fossil fuels as feedstock in 2010. The resulting carbon dioxide emissions were equivalent to 9% of total greenhouse gas emissions in EU28. A complete shift of the energy demand as well as the resource base of feedstocks to electricity would result in an electricity demand of 1713Â TW-hours about 1200Â TW-hours of which would be for producing hydrogen and hydrocarbons for feedstock and energy purposes. With increased material efficiency and some share of bio-based materials and biofuels the electricity demand can be much lower. Our analysis suggest that electrification of basic materials production is technically possible but could have major implications on how the industry and the electric systems interact. It also entails substantial changes in relative prices for electricity and hydrocarbon fuels.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Energy (General)
Authors
Stefan Lechtenböhmer, Lars J. Nilsson, Max Ã
hman, Clemens Schneider,
