Decarbonising the UK residential sector: The dependence of national abatement on flexible and local views of the future

The UK has some of the worst performing residential buildings in the EU from an energy efficiency perspective. Natural gas remains a dominant feature of existing and new-build housing with strong historical, technical, and social barriers to change. Consequently, the residential sector is responsibl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Energy policy 2020-05, Vol.140, p.111321, Article 111321
Hauptverfasser: Broad, Oliver, Hawker, Graeme, Dodds, Paul E.
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description The UK has some of the worst performing residential buildings in the EU from an energy efficiency perspective. Natural gas remains a dominant feature of existing and new-build housing with strong historical, technical, and social barriers to change. Consequently, the residential sector is responsible for significant shares of national emissions and has a strong role to play under ambitious net zero targets. To assess this role, this work combines long-term system-wide optimisation modelling with heat and electricity network models of representative residential locations. The scenario framework investigates key heating alternatives across futures with dwindling carbon budgets but lower restrictions on residential investment options. Comparing frameworks offers insights into “real life” applicability of technology solutions consistent with system-wide decarbonisation pathways to 2050. Residential sector heat plays an increasing role in lowering emissions as targets tighten. Moving away from natural gas becomes unavoidable and long-term trajectories combine end-use electrification, at household or collective levels, with supply-side decarbonisation. This is preferable to alternative gases that continue to carry uncertain emission impacts, but requires significant local network reinforcement. This could be deferred where technically difficult using near-term hybrid approaches. Enabling this transition will rely on policies that support open and varied technology portfolios. •Current climate targets make moving away from natural gas for heating inevitable.•The residential sector is at the margin of UK energy system decarbonisation.•Decarbonising the residential sector through electrified heat can be done.•And is supported by low carbon grid power and more efficient homes.•Hybrid systems & technology diversification help to overcome near-term constraints.
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Natural gas remains a dominant feature of existing and new-build housing with strong historical, technical, and social barriers to change. Consequently, the residential sector is responsible for significant shares of national emissions and has a strong role to play under ambitious net zero targets. To assess this role, this work combines long-term system-wide optimisation modelling with heat and electricity network models of representative residential locations. The scenario framework investigates key heating alternatives across futures with dwindling carbon budgets but lower restrictions on residential investment options. Comparing frameworks offers insights into “real life” applicability of technology solutions consistent with system-wide decarbonisation pathways to 2050. Residential sector heat plays an increasing role in lowering emissions as targets tighten. Moving away from natural gas becomes unavoidable and long-term trajectories combine end-use electrification, at household or collective levels, with supply-side decarbonisation. This is preferable to alternative gases that continue to carry uncertain emission impacts, but requires significant local network reinforcement. This could be deferred where technically difficult using near-term hybrid approaches. Enabling this transition will rely on policies that support open and varied technology portfolios. •Current climate targets make moving away from natural gas for heating inevitable.•The residential sector is at the margin of UK energy system decarbonisation.•Decarbonising the residential sector through electrified heat can be done.•And is supported by low carbon grid power and more efficient homes.•Hybrid systems &amp; technology diversification help to overcome near-term constraints.</description><identifier>ISSN: 0301-4215</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1873-6777</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1016/j.enpol.2020.111321</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Kidlington: Elsevier Ltd</publisher><subject>Ambition ; Budgets ; Electricity ; Electrification ; Emissions ; Energy efficiency ; Energy policy ; Energy system modelling ; Gases ; Heating ; Historical buildings ; Housing ; HVAC ; Natural gas ; Net zero ; Network model ; Optimisation ; Optimization ; Portfolios ; Power system ; Reinforcement ; Residential areas ; Residential buildings ; Residential heat ; Residential location ; Social interactions ; Technology</subject><ispartof>Energy policy, 2020-05, Vol.140, p.111321, Article 111321</ispartof><rights>2020 Elsevier Ltd</rights><rights>Copyright Elsevier Science Ltd. 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Moving away from natural gas becomes unavoidable and long-term trajectories combine end-use electrification, at household or collective levels, with supply-side decarbonisation. This is preferable to alternative gases that continue to carry uncertain emission impacts, but requires significant local network reinforcement. This could be deferred where technically difficult using near-term hybrid approaches. 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source PAIS Index; ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present)
subjects Ambition
Budgets
Electricity
Electrification
Emissions
Energy efficiency
Energy policy
Energy system modelling
Gases
Heating
Historical buildings
Housing
HVAC
Natural gas
Net zero
Network model
Optimisation
Optimization
Portfolios
Power system
Reinforcement
Residential areas
Residential buildings
Residential heat
Residential location
Social interactions
Technology
title Decarbonising the UK residential sector: The dependence of national abatement on flexible and local views of the future
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