A detailed review on current status of energy efficiency improvement in the Swiss industry sector

While quantitative methods for tracking the evolution of energy efficiency (EE) in industry do exist, these cannot always be directly applied, mainly due to lack of data on physical activity levels, as encountered in Switzerland. Therefore, a bottom-up method is developed and tested for estimating t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Energy policy 2020-02, Vol.137, p.111162, Article 111162
Hauptverfasser: Zuberi, M. Jibran S., Santoro, Marina, Eberle, Armin, Bhadbhade, Navdeep, Sulzer, Sabine, Wellig, Beat, Patel, Martin K.
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container_end_page
container_issue
container_start_page 111162
container_title Energy policy
container_volume 137
creator Zuberi, M. Jibran S.
Santoro, Marina
Eberle, Armin
Bhadbhade, Navdeep
Sulzer, Sabine
Wellig, Beat
Patel, Martin K.
description While quantitative methods for tracking the evolution of energy efficiency (EE) in industry do exist, these cannot always be directly applied, mainly due to lack of data on physical activity levels, as encountered in Switzerland. Therefore, a bottom-up method is developed and tested for estimating the sectoral physical activity levels in Switzerland. On this basis, sector-specific EE indices are determined. The results show that during the period 2009–2016, EE improved most in the paper sector (3.3% p.a.), followed by minerals (2.3% p.a.) and food (1.6% p.a.) sectors while the levels have remained approximately unchanged in chemical and metal sectors. Furthermore, the annual change in final energy demand was decomposed into changes of physical production, price levels and EE. The analysis concluded that only the food sector performed well according to all performance indicators. The detailed analysis of the Swiss target agreements’ data has revealed major final energy savings in chemical and food sectors during the period 2000–2016. Among the different categories of EE measures, process related measures have proven to yield the highest energy savings across all sectors. The results indicate the successful implementation of EE measures in Swiss industry, favored by the relatively strict Swiss regulatory framework and its target agreement mechanism. •A bottom-up method is developed for estimating the Swiss physical activity levels.•Sector-specific energy efficiency indices are determined and analyzed.•A detailed analysis of the data on Swiss target agreements is done.
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source PAIS Index; Access via ScienceDirect (Elsevier)
subjects Energy conservation
Energy demand
Energy efficiency
Energy efficiency index
Energy efficiency targets
Energy policy
Exercise
Food
Food processing industry
Industry
Minerals
Performance indicators
Physical activity
Physical activity levels
Physical fitness
Power efficiency
Price levels
Quantitative analysis
Savings
Switzerland
Tracking
title A detailed review on current status of energy efficiency improvement in the Swiss industry sector
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