Covenant of Mayors: Local Energy Generation, Methodology, Policies and Good Practice Examples
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Covenant of Mayors Definition of Local Power Generation
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- Geographical location of the unit: The location of the energy unit in the local territory is the first criterion. The geographical boundaries of the “local territory” are the administrative ones of the entity (municipality, region) governed by the local authority, which is a signatory to the CoM. Hence, electricity that is produced by installations/plants located inside the local territory has to be included in assessment of the LPE.
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- Ownership/operation: All plants/installations under the direct control of the LA (operated and/or at least partly owned by the municipality) should be accounted for in the calculation of the LPE. Therefore, electricity produced by installations/plants located outside the local territory can also be optionally included if they are under the direct control of the LA. The amount of the electricity production can be assessed according to the responsibility of the LA and the share of ownership of all partners (municipalities or commercial partners), which avoids double counting inside and outside the territory. The motivation for taking into account generation facilities under municipality control is that the LA should lead by example on climate actions starting from their own/operated facilities.
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- Source, type and capacity of the local electricity production unit: The method described in this paper recommends including all the individual electricity generation units in the local territory and also any plant outside the local territory that is owned and/or operated by LA, classified by the type and capacity as below:
- Local electricity production from renewable sources and combustible renewables are classified regardless of the technology and capacity, with the exclusion of the electricity sold to third parties that are located outside the local administrative boundaries and are identified through disclosed attributes. The rationale behind this is similar to the concept of the “residual mix” used by member states (MS) in the EU for assessing the grid emission factor. When determining the residual mix, MS often exclude the cancellation of electricity attributes (purchased via a Guarantee of Origin (GO) certificate in Europe) from the grid emission average [42]. The GOs are tracking instruments, introduced in 2009 by the Renewable Energy Directive (RED 2009/28/EC), that provide a means of demonstrating the origin of renewable electricity to consumers. The GOs system is a virtual one where the renewable attribute of energy trades separately from the physical energy. The usage is limited within 12 months of production of the corresponding energy unit, and is cancelled once it has been used.
- Local electricity production from non-renewable sources, classified by types and capacity:
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- All combined heat and power plants, without capacity limit: the CHP system can be defined as local generation, as the second product (thermal energy) is consumed locally. Combined cycle gas turbines, internal combustion engines, combustion turbines, biomass gasification, geothermal, and Stirling engines, as well as fuel cells, are suitable for CHP processes. The heat demand usually drives the operation process, unless a back-up system for the heat production is in place.
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- Electricity-only with a capacity limit of 20 MW of thermal input: According to the principles that are laid out in the CoM, the inventory is not meant to be an exhaustive inventory of all emission sources in the territory but focuses on the energy consumption side and on the sectors and activities (buildings and transport) upon which the local authority has a potential influence. Large industrial power plants, covered by cap and trade schemes, such as the European Union Emission Trading Scheme (EU ETS), are not under LAs competence, but regulated by the ETS directive (2003/87/EC).
2.2. Covenant of Mayors Methodology on Accounting the Indirect Emissions
2.2.1. The Location-Based Method
- National or European emission factor for electricity consumption (NEEFE): These emission factors can be derived either from international databases, such as the International Energy Agency (IEA) [44], the IPCC emissions factor database [45], or provided by national agencies of MS in the EU (e.g., Italy [46]). The European Commission Joint Research Centre (EC JRC), in the framework of the CoM initiative, also provides regular updates of the NEEFE [47].
- The local energy generation emission factor can be derived directly or is assessable from the local (private or public) electricity provider, costumer and/or unit operator. In case of CHPs, a method has been developed to allocate the emissions based on the energy inputs required to produce separately (not in cogeneration) the same amount of outputs of heat and electricity (as in the CHP power plant output), which is named an efficiency method in the case of CHPs.
2.2.2. The Efficiency Method in Case of CHPs
- is the efficiency reference value for separate electricity production at national level;
- is the efficiency reference value for separate heat production;
- is the efficiency of electricity production with the CHP power plant, measured as a ratio between the annual amount of electricity produced in output ( and the total annual amount of primary energy in input to the CHP power plant (): ;
- is the efficiency of heat production with the CHP power plant, measured as a ratio between the annual amount of heat produced in output ( and the total annual amount of primary energy in input to the CHP power plant (): .
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- is the total amount of CO2 emissions in the CHP power plant (tCO2);
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- is the total amount of CO2 emissions allocated to heat production (tCO2);
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- is the total amount of CO2 emissions allocated to electricity production (tCO2);
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- The recommended value in the CoM of the typical efficiency of separate electricity production to be used is set in the national efficiency factor for electricity generation and/or the average of EU regularly published by Eurostat (46%) in Reference [48];
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- The recommended value of the typical efficiency of separate heat production () to be used in the CoM framework is 90%.
2.2.3. The Market-Based Method
- Instead of purchasing the “mixed” electricity from the grid, the local authority/other local actors can decide to purchase certified electricity. The LA will report the amount of purchased electricity (), which is not already reported under LPE.
- The amount of renewable energy produced by facilities that are located inside the local territory for which the GO of electricity produced from renewable sources is sold to third parties outside the administrative boundaries should not be accounted for as local energy production ().
- is the certified electricity accounted for in the inventory as given by Equation (5):
2.2.4. Indirect Emissions due to Local Electricity Consumption
- In the case where the local authority would not be a net exporter of electricity (TCE ≥ LPE + CE), the average emission factor will be equal to the total amount of emissions from electricity consumption assessed with (location-based + market-based instruments) over the total amount of electricity consumption as provided in Equation (6):
- In the case where the local authority would be a net exporter of electricity (TCE < LPE + CE), Equation (7) will apply:
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- is the local emission factor for electricity consumption
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- total electricity consumption (MWh) in the local territory
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- local electricity production from RES and non-RES facilities (MWh)
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- certified electricity accounted in the inventory
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- national or European emission factor for electricity consumption
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- CO2 emissions due to local energy production (tCO2)
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- CO2 emissions (tCO2) due the purchase/sold of CE certified electricity
2.2.5. Indirect Emissions from Local District Heating and Cooling Consumption
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- EFH is emission factor for heat/cold (tCO2/MWh or tCO2-eq/MWh)
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- is total CO2 emissions (tCO2 or tCO2-eq) due to the local production of heat/cold
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- is CO2 emissions related to any imported heat/cold from outside the local territory (tCO2 or tCO2-eq)
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- is CO2 emissions related to any heat/cold that is exported outside of the local territory (tCO2 or tCO2-eq)
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- ΣLHC is local heat/cold consumption (MWh)
3. EU Energy and Climate Policies
4. Urban Energy and Climate Governance to Support Sustainable Energy and Climate Action Plans
- municipal self-governing (M1)
- municipal enabling (governing through enabling) (M2)
- governing through provision (M3)
- governing by regulation and planning (authority) (M4).
4.1. Municipal Self-Governing
4.2. Municipal Enabling
4.3. Governing through Provision
4.4. Governing by Regulation and Planning
- Evaluation of geothermal energy potential considering legal and technical barriers of ground perforation and the environmental effect on the underground water layer.
- With regard to the use of biomass, making a technical and economical evaluation of the potential of the biomass harvested in public spaces, companies and citizens’ properties, the potential impacts of biomass combustion on air quality and health should also be evaluated.
- Considering the integration of residual heat into the district and cooling network, including sources of residual heat from the industry, data centres, wastewater treatment plants and waste incinerators.
- Establishing an integrated urban planning process to promote renewable energy generation deployment and identifying possible sites to install local energy generation installations, such as those for solar, wind, small hydro and biogas, will ensure the availability and compatibility of public and private space to achieve projects. Some European local authorities offer rooftops of public buildings to private companies for rent to produce energy by means of photovoltaic collectors [59]. Establishing integrated urban planning processes, include those to promote DH/C networks and cogeneration plants, should be supported with mapping tools of thermal energy demand from buildings based on reliable data from utilities.
5. Key Measures for Transition to Sustainable Local Energy Systems
5.1. Photovoltaic
5.2. Solar Thermal
5.3. Wind Energy
5.4. Hydroelectric Power
5.5. Bioenergy
5.6. Geothermal Energy
5.7. Multiple Renewable Energy Sources
5.8. Combined Heat and Power
5.9. District Heating and/or Cooling
5.10. Smart Electricity Grids
5.11. Waste and Water Management
6. Conclusions
- An updated definition of local energy generation, favouring the inclusion of the new developments of distributed generation, especially from renewable energy sources and cogeneration technologies.
- An updated methodology for indirect emission accounting, taking into account the increasing participation of local citizens along with local authorities in the energy transition.
- An updated overview of the EU energy and climate policies influencing local action in energy generation.
- An updated guidance to local authorities on the modes of energy and climate governance. In this process, local authorities have the capacity to support and mobilise action for local energy generation investments. The four modes of urban energy and climate governance are investigated and a policy matrix that summarises the scope of each mode along with the main tools, and exemplary actions to support local energy sustainability are provided.
- The exemplary actions to support local sustainable energy generation can be used to further promote city-to-city policy learning based on the Benchmarks of Excellence. The cities will observe that there are a multitude of approaches that can strengthen urban energy and climate governance in a coherent way, including the application of multiple modes simultaneously for combined impact.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Area of Intervention | Policy Measure | M1 | M2 | M3 | M4 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Local electricity generation: Photovoltaic | Municipal financing and ownership of PV pilot plants on public buildings (rooftop PV and building-integrated PV systems) | ✓ | |||
PV installations on the roofs of bus sheds (968 kW in Mantova, Italy) or parking lots | ✓ | ||||
Construction of a PV park on ground of municipal property at a former landfill site (994 kW in Torrile, Italy; Évora, Portugal) | ✓ | ||||
Concession of surface rights and renting of rooftop areas in public buildings for PV | ✓ | ✓ | |||
PV installations in public buildings based on collaboration with the ESCo and third-party financing for PV systems in school buildings | ✓ | ✓ | |||
Public-private partnership for Photovoltaic Solar Park (24.2 MW in Coruche, Portugal) | ✓ | ✓ | |||
City supported photovoltaic campaign
| ✓ | ✓ | |||
Energy supplier obligations for PV systems
| ✓ | ||||
Municipality bonus for photovoltaic and solar thermal installation on citizen’s roof | ✓ | ||||
Interest-free loans for associations or schools for PV panel installations (Bree, Belgium) | ✓ | ||||
PV systems that supply electric vehicle charging stations (135 kW in Poole, U.K.) | ✓ | ✓ | |||
Real time electricity generation data on PV systems of the City Council (Málaga, Spain) and visual consoles on CO2 reductions | ✓ | ✓ | |||
Awareness building and planning supporting tools for solar energy
| ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
Public awareness to reach annual increase targets for PV in the private buildings | ✓ | ✓ | |||
Land use planning for utility-scale PV plants in the municipality | ✓ | ||||
Local heat generation: Solar thermal | Solar collectors on rooftops of municipal buildings, swimming pool facilities, sport buildings and schools (including flat-plate and parabolic solar collector installations)
| ✓ | |||
Purchasing groups to allow widespread diffusion of solar thermal technology | ✓ | ||||
Ordinance for installing solar collectors
| ✓ | ||||
Targets to increase the area of solar thermal in the municipality | ✓ | ||||
Local electricity generation: Wind energy | Public procurement of municipality owned wind turbines (4 × 3.3 MW in Eskilstuna, Sweden at 40% of the municipal electricity load) | ✓ | |||
Installation of wind power farms
| ✓ | ✓ | |||
Wind and solar farm with citizen cooperation (Nijmegen, Netherlands) | ✓ | ||||
Attraction of companies that want to generate electricity from wind energy
| ✓ | ||||
Land use planning for wind turbines | ✓ | ||||
Local electricity generation: Hydroelectric power | Mini-hydro plants on municipal waterworks
| ✓ | |||
Hydroelectric power plant construction (Manerbio, Italy; Mazzin, Italy; Rosà, Italy) | ✓ | ✓ | |||
Attraction of investment to realize an in-stream tidal hydro power plant (10 MW) | ✓ | ||||
Run-of-river hydroelectric plants
| ✓ | ||||
Bioenergy | New anaerobic digestion plant in public waste recovery and treatment company | ✓ | |||
Public–private partnership between the municipality and waste management utility for anaerobic digestion of biowaste for CHP-based district heating (Este, Italy) | ✓ | ||||
Biogas cogeneration plant for electricity and thermal energy provision based on anaerobic digestion (Annicco, Italy) | ✓ | ||||
Biogas cogeneration based on zootechnical wastewater and silage cereals | ✓ | ||||
Biogas-driven district heating network | ✓ | ||||
Biomass-based district heating network and/or biomass boilers for replacing diesel boilers (local wood chips < 60 km from sustainable management of forests)
| ✓ | ||||
Recovery of methane gas from landfills to produce electricity based on gas engines
| ✓ | ✓ | |||
Consortium for a cogeneration plant based on biomass certified as sustainable (waste produced locally or from local consortium companies (Bagnolo San Vito, Italy) | ✓ | ✓ | |||
Installation of wood chip boilers in the CHP plant for carbon neutral district heating
| ✓ | ||||
Collection and recycling of used cooking oil for biodiesel production (Loures, Portugal) | ✓ | ||||
Geothermal energy | Construction of a geothermal power plant | ✓ | |||
Low enthalpy geothermal heating for municipal residential building | ✓ | ||||
Renewable energy (multiple sources) | Public buildings that are self-sufficient based on on-site renewable energy
| ✓ | |||
Public buildings with bioclimatic design principles and renewable energy utilisation
| ✓ | ||||
Purchasing of certified renewable power for public buildings and public lighting
| ✓ | ||||
Energy renovation of buildings including solar thermal collectors and/or biomass with 50% city co-financing (Karlovac, Croatia) | ✓ | ||||
Awareness building actions
| ✓ | ||||
City council grants and subsidies for renewable energy (PV, solar thermal, biomass, ground source heat pumps)
| ✓ | ||||
Clean technology funds for renewables | ✓ | ||||
Co-financing between local and regional authorities for public energy upgrading
| ✓ | ✓ | |||
Promotion of distributed energy generation based on Urban Building Regulations and simplified building authorization procedures | ✓ | ✓ | |||
Demonstrations of net or nearly zero-energy building with renewable energy
| ✓ | ✓ | |||
Brownfield urban development with renewables and sustainable districts
| ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
Onshore power supply with high-voltage for docking ships in the port (Göteborg, Sweden) | ✓ |
Area of Intervention | Policy Measure | M1 | M2 | M3 | M4 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Combined heat and power | Cogeneration plant for municipal buildings | ✓ | |||
Biomass-based combined heat and power plant to support the district heating system (Jönköping, Sweden, with 340 GWht and 130 GWhe) | ✓ | ||||
Modernization of the cogeneration plant with fuel flexibility for waste and bioenergy (Västerås, Sweden) | ✓ | ||||
Investment of the public utility company in a new cogeneration plant with both district heating and cooling infrastructure
| ✓ | ✓ | |||
Subsidies for CHP electricity production | ✓ | ||||
District heating/cooling plant | Large-scale solar thermal solutions in district heating systems (Marstal District Heating in Aeroe, Denmark) | ✓ | |||
Flue-gas heat recovery to increase efficiency of heat production (Riga, Latvia) | ✓ | ||||
District heating/cooling network | Contract to connect municipal buildings and schools to the district heating network
| ✓ | ✓ | ||
Integrated heating systems between public buildings (Vittorio Veneto, Italy) | ✓ | ||||
Initiative to increase the purchased volume of energy from the district heating network
| ✓ | ✓ | |||
Modernization and rehabilitation of district heating and/or cooling networks
| ✓ | ||||
Co-financing of thermal energy distributors and thermostatic radiator valves in the district heating network (Rijeka, Croatia) | ✓ | ||||
Connection of low energy houses to a low-temperature district heating network (Västerås, Sweden) | ✓ | ||||
Connection of buildings and industries to the district cooling network
| ✓ | ||||
Utilisation of residual heat from urban wastewater (e.g., Aachen, Denmark, and others) | ✓ | ||||
Utilisation of industrial waste heat
| ✓ | ||||
Co-operation to establish noise barriers for road and rail traffic equipped with solar energy collectors to support the local district heating system (Lerum, Sweden) | ✓ | ||||
Cooperation with the local energy utility to establish a district heating network | ✓ | ||||
Interconnection of district heating networks and extension of distribution piping | ✓ | ✓ | |||
Urban planning to increase the connection of buildings to the municipally-owned district heating network (Kristianstad, Sweden) | ✓ | ✓ | |||
Increase in the share of renewable energy sources in the district heating network
| ✓ | ||||
Smart electricity grids | Cooperation with the district network operator for demand side management
| ✓ | ✓ | ||
Financing of pilot projects on smart grids and allocation of local demonstration sites (local, regional, national and EU funds) | ✓ |
Area of Intervention | Policy Measure | M1 | M2 | M3 | M4 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Waste management | Separate waste collection to increase the recycling of municipal solid waste and the use of organic waste for biogas production | ✓ | ✓ | ||
Use of green waste for the production of compost and pellets (Lakatamia, Cyprus ) | ✓ | ✓ | |||
Utilisation of organic waste for composting rather than waste-to-energy incineration | ✓ | ✓ | |||
Wastewater treatment plants | Self-sufficient wastewater facility based on methane driven combined heat and power plant (Neumarkt in der Oberpfalz, Germany) | ✓ | ✓ | ||
Water management | Integration of renewable sources for supplying power to pumping tapwater | ✓ | ✓ | ||
Reduction in electricity usage for pumping based on reductions in water losses in the drinking-water distribution network(Seixal, Portugal; Bilbao, Portugal) | ✓ | ✓ | |||
Information system for energy and water use in the public sector (Voznesensk, Ukraine) | ✓ | ✓ |
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Share and Cite
Kona, A.; Bertoldi, P.; Kılkış, Ş. Covenant of Mayors: Local Energy Generation, Methodology, Policies and Good Practice Examples. Energies 2019, 12, 985. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12060985
Kona A, Bertoldi P, Kılkış Ş. Covenant of Mayors: Local Energy Generation, Methodology, Policies and Good Practice Examples. Energies. 2019; 12(6):985. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12060985
Chicago/Turabian StyleKona, Albana, Paolo Bertoldi, and Şiir Kılkış. 2019. "Covenant of Mayors: Local Energy Generation, Methodology, Policies and Good Practice Examples" Energies 12, no. 6: 985. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12060985
APA StyleKona, A., Bertoldi, P., & Kılkış, Ş. (2019). Covenant of Mayors: Local Energy Generation, Methodology, Policies and Good Practice Examples. Energies, 12(6), 985. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12060985