Achieving a Flexible and Sustainable Energy System: The Case of Kosovo
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
2.1. EnergyPLAN Tool
- Balancing hourly heat demand only.
- Balancing both electricity and heat demand.
- Balancing both heat and electricity demands by reducing combined heat and power (CHP) in order to have grid stabilization.
- Balancing heat demands by using triple tariff.
2.2. Key Objectives Towards a Sustainable Energy System in Kosovo
- Operational flexibility enhancement through a comprehensive strategy for balancing electricity and supply in a secure and efficient manner.
- Cutting CO2 emissions by 50% in the year 2050.
- Reduce the coal share in the PES in both 2030 and 2050 scenarios.
2.3. Data Collection
3. Kosovo Energy System
3.1. Baseline Scenario for the Year 2015
3.2. Energy System Scenarios for 2030 and 2050
- One unit of CHP plant with 339 MW installed capacity was substituted with a hydropower plant of the same capacity.
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Technical Analysis
4.2. Environmental Analysis
4.3. Cost Analysis
4.4. Comparative Analysis
5. Conclusions
6. Future Work
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
CCS | Carbon Capture and Sequestration |
PES | Primary Energy Supply |
CEEP | Critical Excess Electricity Production |
RES | Renewable Energy Share |
KOSTT | Kosovo Transmission System and Market Operator |
KEDS | Kosovo Electricity Distribution and Supply Company |
ERO | Energy Regulatory Office |
ENTSOE | European Network of Transmission System Operators for Electricity |
EU | European Union |
CHP | Combined heat and power |
SEE | South East Europe (The SEE region consists of Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Greece, Macedonia, Montenegro, Romania, Serbia, Slovenia and Kosovo) |
H2RES | Energy planning software for optimization of microgrid components sizing |
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Scenario | Software | Installed Generation Capacity (MW) | PES (PJ) | Total elec. gen (TWh/year) | Elec. Demand (TWh/year) | RES (%) | CO2 Emissions (Mt/year) | Ref. | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Thermal | Hydro | Biomass | Wind | Heat pumps | PV | ||||||||
Ref. (2008) | EnergyPLAN | 41,431 | 23,125 | 696 | 1149 | 10 | 5312 | 277.4 | 360 | [19] | |||
Alt. (2020) | 51,555 | 34,312 | 2539 | 17,474 | 3834 | 6000 | 350 | 21 | 370 | ||||
Alt. (2030) | 42,612 | 3132 | 34,000 | 500 | 16,000 | 5190 | 410 | 50 | 200 | ||||
Alt. (2050) | 150,000 | 4000 | 100,530 | 600 | 60,000 | 3397 | 520 | 100 | 10 | ||||
Ref. (2008) | EnergyPLAN | 300 | 100 | 120 | 9 | 7.68 | 9 | [20] | |||||
Alt. (2030) | 1375 | 800 | 1500 | 1100 | 105 | 12 | 12.37 | 50 | 4 | ||||
Alt. (2050) | 2760 | 50 | 1600 | 80 | 15 | 100 | 0 | ||||||
Ref. (2004) | EnergyPLAN | 3000 | 850 | [21] | |||||||||
Alt. (2030) | 6000 | 450 | 700 | 970 | 33.22 | 50 | 54 | ||||||
Alt. (2050) | 1500 | 420 | 30.2 | 100 | 0 | ||||||||
Ref. (2006) | H2RES | 5851 | 4965 | 477.2 | 1600 | 3.4 | 49 | 49.176 | 32.9 | [22] | |||
Alt. (2020) | 7000 | 8500 | 1500 | 54 | 81 | ||||||||
Alt. | 3454 | 750 | 9970 | 4500 | 100 | ||||||||
Ref. (2007) | EnergyPLAN | 2139 | 508 | 724 | 655.4 | 27.19 | 28.5 | 46.8 | [24] | ||||
Alt. (2020) | 20 | ||||||||||||
Ref. (2008) | EnergyPLAN, H2RES | 22.14 | [25] | ||||||||||
Alt. (2020) | 2400 | 300 | 85 | 1200 | 386.84 | 106.78 | 20 | 21.34 | |||||
Alt. (2020) | 200 | 172 | 100 |
Fuel Type | Household | Service | Industry | Transport | Agriculture | Total | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Biomass | 2.72 | 0.08 | 0.14 | 0.006 | 2.95 | [4] | |
Oil | 0.23 | 0.48 | 1.83 | 3.41 | 0.16 | 6.12 | [4] |
Coal | 0.16 | 0.31 | 0.21 | 0.007 | 0.63 | [4] | |
Electricity-applicants | 2.9 | 0.82 | 1.22 | 0.02 | 4.96 | [4] |
Technology | Investment (MEuro/MW) | Fixed O&M (% of Inv.) | Lifetime (years) | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
Electricity | ||||
CHP | 1.4 | 2.5 | 25 | [56,57] |
Onshore wind power | 1.9 | 1.5 | 20 | [58,59,60] |
PV | 1.9 | 1 | 33 | [61,62] |
River of hydro | 2 | 2.5 | 50 | [63,64] |
Heating | ||||
Ind. Bio-heat boiler | 0.68 | 1 | 20 | [65] |
Electric heating | 0.8 | 1 | 30 | [66] |
Solar thermal | 4.5 | 0.5 | 30 | [66] |
Ind. Heat pumps | 0.9 | 1.5 | 20 | [65] |
Transport | ||||
Biodiesel plant | 1.89 | 3.01 | 20 | [25] |
Biopetrol plant | 0.44 | 7.68 | 20 | [25] |
Moth | KOSTT | EnergyPLAN | Difference |
---|---|---|---|
Jan | 814 | 814 | 0 |
Feb | 768 | 766 | 2 |
Mar | 727 | 727 | 0 |
Apr | 651 | 644 | 7 |
May | 525 | 525 | 0 |
Jun | 518 | 518 | 0 |
Jul | 545 | 547 | −2 |
Aug | 544 | 544 | 0 |
Sep | 543 | 545 | −2 |
Oct | 614 | 616 | −2 |
Nov | 687 | 689 | −2 |
Dec | 821 | 819 | 2 |
Sector | Scenario 1 for 2030 | Scenario 1 for 2050 |
---|---|---|
Electricity | Increase in solar PV from 0.102 MW to 10.102 MW | Introduce 339 MW hydropower |
Increase in wind power from 1.35 MW to 151.35 MW | Introduce 339 MW PV | |
Increase in hydropower from 52.98 MW to 597.87 MW | Introduce 14 MW of biomass CHP for electricity | |
Construction of new CHP with 450 MW installed capacity based on coal and biomass | Decommission of condensing power plant Kosova B | |
Technical minimum of total CHP plants to be equal to 580 MW | ||
Heating | Replacement of coal boilers with cogeneration and heat pumps | 80% of heat demand to be covered by renewable sources |
20% of total heat demand to be covered by cogeneration from CHP | Supply 72.32% of heat demand with biomass micro CHP Supply 3.84% of heat demand with solar thermal and heat pumps | |
50% of heat demand to be covered by renewable sources | Heating will count 2.39% of total heat demand | |
Electric heating will remain the same accounting 5.98% of total heat demand | 9.61% of heat demand will be covered by biomass boilers | |
Solid biomass will count with 47.6% | Supply 8% of heat demand by cogeneration | |
Supply 45.2% of heat demand by biomass micro CHP | ||
Supply 10% of heat demand by cogeneration | ||
Supply 2.5% of heat demand by individual heat pumps | ||
Transport | Replacement of 20% of fuels (petrol, diesel, LPG and jet fuel) in transport with biofuels (bioethanol and biodiesel) | 50% of transport demand to be based on renewable sources (bioethanol and biodiesel) |
Introducing electric cars in transportation with 5% in the overall fuel consumption | Increase the share of electric cars for 5% share from 2030 scenario in transport sector |
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Ibrahimi, N.; Gebremedhin, A.; Sahiti, A. Achieving a Flexible and Sustainable Energy System: The Case of Kosovo. Energies 2019, 12, 4753. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12244753
Ibrahimi N, Gebremedhin A, Sahiti A. Achieving a Flexible and Sustainable Energy System: The Case of Kosovo. Energies. 2019; 12(24):4753. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12244753
Chicago/Turabian StyleIbrahimi, Njomza, Alemayehu Gebremedhin, and Alketa Sahiti. 2019. "Achieving a Flexible and Sustainable Energy System: The Case of Kosovo" Energies 12, no. 24: 4753. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12244753
APA StyleIbrahimi, N., Gebremedhin, A., & Sahiti, A. (2019). Achieving a Flexible and Sustainable Energy System: The Case of Kosovo. Energies, 12(24), 4753. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12244753