Energy Saving, Energy Efficiency or Renewable Energy: Which Is Better for the Decarbonization of the Residential Sector in Italy?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Motivations of the Study
- The international crisis due to the uncertainty of natural gas (NG) supplies especially from Russia due to the ongoing conflict in Ukraine.
- The tension regarding the international prices of gas and electricity, which, in the second quarter of 2022, reached 134 c€ Sm−3 and 41.3 c€ kWh−1, respectively, for the utilization of the average family [5].
- The Italian energy mix, both in terms of final energy uses and in terms of gross energy availability. Italy is largely dependent on natural gas as primary source, especially for the residential sector. In the first case (final uses), the residential sector is currently (2021) responsible for about 29% of final energy consumption, 33,165 out of 114,781 ktoe, of which 17,668 ktoe were supplied by natural gas [6]. In the second case (gross energy availability), 62,511 out of 153,024 ktoe were supplied by natural gas in Italy in 2021 [6]. Of the 62,511 ktoe, 22,010 ktoe were used for electricity production. As a matter of fact, 142 out of 284.7 TWh of gross electricity produced in Italy in 2021 were supplied by natural gas (49.9%), with a conversion efficiency of 55.4% [6].
1.2. Background, Scope and Novelty of the Study
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Main Hypotheses of the Analysis
- Gross domestic consumption (national production + import − export − inventory change) (9.97 kWh Sm−3 is the lower heating value (LHV) of natural gas):62,511 ktoe × 0.01163 TWh ktoe−1 × 109 kWh TWh−1/9.97 kWh Sm−3 = 74.26 GSm3.
- For electricity production:22,010 ktoe × 0.01163 TWh ktoe−1 × 109 kWh TWh−1/9.97 kWh Sm−3 = 26.15 GSm3.
- For general domestic use (heating + domestic hot water (DHW) + cooking):17,668 ktoe × 0.01163 TWh ktoe−1 × 109 kWh TWh−1/9.97 kWh Sm−3 = 20.99 GSm3.
- For use of heating only (referring to the percentage of the domestic total for 2020, equal to 71%):0.71 × 20.99 GSm3 = 14.90 GSm3.
2.2. Actions to Be Compared
- administrative measures, which may be imposed with regulatory provisions;
- behavioural measures, somehow easy to implement, related to user behaviour.
- useful energy savings (i.e., actions that reduce the final energy demand of the building with respect to a reference scenario):
- lowering (heating season) or raising (cooling season) the set-point temperature inside the rooms by 1 °C (typically fixed, respectively, at 20 and 26 °C);
- reduction of one hour per day (in the evening) of the operation time (which depends on the climatic zone) of the heating and cooling systems;
- reduction of 15 days of the operating period of the plants (which is a function of the climatic zone);
- simultaneously a1 + a2 + a3;
- increase in the thermal insulation of the external walls;
- replacement of windows with ones with lower thermal transmittance;
- simultaneously a5 + a6;
- reduction in the consumption of natural gas for the production of DHW by reducing the time and temperature of the shower;
- increase in energy efficiency (i.e., actions that reduce the consumption of non-renewable primary energy with the same final energy demand equal to that of the reference scenario). In all these cases, the DHW is produced with an air/water heat pump with average coefficient of performance (COP) assumed equal to 3.5:
- replacement of old boilers for winter heating with modern air/water heat pumps;
- replacement of the old air conditioners for summer cooling with the aforementioned modern air/water heat pumps that operate as air conditioners;
- installation of a mechanical ventilation system with a heat recovery heat exchanger with fixed efficiency of 50%. This action decreases the demand for final energy, but it can be considered as an energy efficiency improvement action because its efficacy can be measured by a COP (ratio between the thermal energy saved and the electrical energy consumed by the fans), such as a heat pump;
- simultaneously b1 + b2 + b3;
- installation of renewable energy systems:
- installation of photovoltaic modules and evacuated tube solar collectors (PV and ETC) to satisfy the requirement of Legislative Decree 199/2021 (the renewable ratio must be at least 60% referring to heating, DHW and cooling services). It is assumed that the integration required for heating and DHW is satisfied by an air/water heat pump with an average COP of 3, while the satisfaction of the cooling load takes place via an air/air conditioner with an average energy efficiency ratio (EER) of 2.8;
- installation of photovoltaic/thermal hybrid panels (PVT) with the same criteria as in the previous point c1.
2.3. Description of the Simulation Model
2.3.1. Buildings and Thermal Loads
- An apartment (area 80 m2) in a five-storey condominium with a parallelepiped shape. The building has garages on the ground floor, the other four floors have four apartments each (16 apartments per condominium). The ground floor has an area of 320 m2, wall dimensions of 9.33 × 2.4 m and 10 × 2.4 m and the floor in contact with the ground, whose temperature is considered variable as a function of the external air temperature. The other four floors have an area of 320 m2 and wall dimensions of 8 × 2.7 m and 10 × 2.7 m. The building is orientated with the short sides (10 m) facing west and east.
- A single-family detached house [28] with two floors (areas of 77 and 58 m2, respectively) and a total volume of 363.5 m3. The main entrance has a north orientation, and the portico is to the south; a wall of the living room is oriented west.
- heating with a set point at 20 °C, with attenuation at 16 °C;
- cooling with a set point at 26 °C, with attenuation at 28 °C;
- infiltrations 0.5 vol h−1;
- no mechanical ventilation.
2.3.2. Simulation Models of “Energy Efficiency” and ”Renewable Energy” Plants
2.3.3. Further Hypotheses of the Analysis
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Energy Analysis by Climatic Zones
3.2. Economic Analysis by Climatic Zones
3.3. Energy and Economic Analysis at the National Level
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
Symbol | Meaning | Unit |
COP | Coefficient of performance | - |
fp | Primary energy factor | - |
EER | Energy efficiency ratio | |
PE | Primary energy | (kWh, J) |
Subscript | Meaning | |
el | Electricity from the grid | |
nren | Non-renewable | |
ren | Renewable | |
tot | Total | |
Acronym | Meaning | Unit |
DHW | Domestic hot water | |
EED | Energy efficiency directive | |
EPBD | Energy performance of buildings directive | |
EU | European Union | |
LHV | Lower heating value | (kWh Sm−3) |
NG | Natural gas | |
OPEX | OPerative EXpenses | |
PV | Photovoltaic | |
PVT | Photovoltaic/thermal | |
RED | Renewable energy directive | |
TRY | Test reference year |
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Climatic Zone | Resort | Latitude (North) | Altitude a.s.l. | Heating Degree Days |
---|---|---|---|---|
B | Trapani | 38°1′ | 3 m | 810 |
C | Napoli | 40°51′ | 17 m | 1034 |
D | Roma | 41°54′ | 20 m | 1415 |
E | Milano | 45°28′ | 122 m | 2404 |
F | Agordo (Belluno) | 46°21′ | 976 m | 4055 |
Climatic Zone | Heating Percentage | NG Consumption for Residential Heating (MSm3) | Cooling Percentage | DHW Percentage [26] |
---|---|---|---|---|
B | 1.0% | 146 | 73.0% | 12.0% |
C | 6.2% | 907 | 19.3% | 17.7% |
D | 18.3% | 2677 | 6.7% | 24.6% |
E | 72.0% | 10,534 | 1.0% | 28.5% |
F | 2.5% | 366 | 0.0% | 17.2% |
Tot. | 100.0% | 14,630 | 100.0% | 100.0% |
Month | EER | Month | EER |
---|---|---|---|
4 | 3.7 | 7 | 3 |
5 | 3.5 | 8 | 3.1 |
6 | 3.2 | 9 | 3.4 |
Climatic Zone | Base Case (W m−2 K−1) | a5 (W m−2 K−1) | a6 (W m−2 K−1) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Roofs | Vertical Walls | Windows | Roofs | Vertical Walls | Windows | |||
B | 1.5 | 0.95 | 4.25 | 0.32 | 0.4 | 3 | ||
C | 1.5 | 0.95 | 4.25 | 0.32 | 0.36 | 2 | ||
D | 1.5 | 0.95 | 4.25 | 0.26 | 0.32 | 1.8 | ||
E | 0.9 | 0.78 | 4.25 | 0.24 | 0.28 | 1.4 | ||
F | 0.9 | 0.78 | 4.25 | 0.22 | 0.26 | 1 |
Climatic Zone | Heating | Cooling | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
From (Day/Month) | To (Day/Month) | N. Days Per Year | From (Day/Month) | To (Day/Month) | N. Days Per Year | ||
B | 1/12 | 31/3 | 120 | 25/4 | 6/10 | 164 | |
C | 15/11 | 31/3 | 136 | 1/5 | 27/9 | 149 | |
D | 1/11 | 15/4 | 165 | 15/5 | 14/9 | 122 | |
E | 15/10 | 15/4 | 182 | 25/5 | 10/9 | 108 | |
F | 5/10 | 22/4 | 199 | 5/6 | 7/9 | 94 |
Parameter | Unit | Value |
---|---|---|
Rated heating capacity (action b1) | kW | 61.5 (zones B-C-D) 110.5 (zones E-F) |
Rated heating electric power (action b1) | kW | 13.45 (zones B-C-D) 24.17 (zones E-F) |
Rated cooling capacity (action b1-b2) | kW | 40 (all the zones) |
Rated cooling electric power (old air conditioner, action b1) | kW | 11.245 (all the zones) |
Rated cooling electric power (new air conditioner, action b2) | kW | 8.245 (all the zones) |
Parameter | Unit | PV | ETC | PVT |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cell Size | mm | 156 × 156 | 156 × 156 | |
Cell Type and Number | Mono-crystal, 72 | Mono-crystal, 72 | ||
Gross Area | m2 | 1.88 | 4.71 | 2.1 |
Opening Area | m2 | 1.8 | 4.19 | 1.95 |
Packing Factor | 0.9 | 0.9 | ||
N. Modules or Total Area | 48 modules | 100 m2 | 200 m2 | |
Electrical Specifications (Values tested under STC) | ||||
Nominal Power (Pmax) | Wp | 400 | 300 | |
Nominal Voltage (Vmp) | V | 29.3 | 36.6 | |
Nominal Current (Imp) | A | 13.67 | 8.45 | |
Power Temperature Coefficient | %/°C | −0.33 | −0.43 | |
Module Efficiency | 21.2% | 16.0% | ||
Thermal Specifications | ||||
Recommended Flow Rate | L h−1 m−2 | 36–60 | 50 | |
Zero Loss Efficiency (η0) | 71.8% | 51% | ||
a1 (First Order Heat Loss, FRUC) | W m−2 K−1 | 1.051 | 9.10 | |
a2 (Second Order Heat Loss) | W m−2 K−2 | 0.004 | 0 |
IAM | Angle | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0° | 20° | 40° | 50° | 60° | 70° | 90° | |
Transversal | 1 | 0.99 | 0.95 | 0.9 | 0.81 | 0.66 | 0 |
Longitudinal | 1 | 0.99 | 1.01 | 1.09 | 1.1 | 1.29 | 0 |
Factor/Parameter | Unit | Value |
---|---|---|
CO2 emissions for NG | kgCO2 Sm−3 | 1.984 |
CO2 emissions for grid electricity (consumption level) | kgCO2 kWhel−1 | 0.29 |
LHV NG | kWh Sm−3 | 9.79 |
fp,nren,NG | 1.05 | |
fp,nren,el | 1.95 | |
fp,ren,el | 0.47 | |
Cost of electricity from the grid | € kWhel−1 | 0.4 |
Cost of NG | € Sm−3 | 1 |
Income from avoided CO2 emission | € tCO2−1 | 80 |
Case | Heating (TJ) | Cooling (TJ) | DHW (TJ) | Total (TJ) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Base | 2318 + 18,821 + 60,250 + +412,549 + 21,179 = 515,117 | 27,875 + 6379 + 3049 + +194.4 + 0 = 37,497 | 12,618 + 19,876 + 28,393 + +34,895 + 22,000 = 117,782 | 670,400 |
b4 | 615.6 + 5695 + 18,587 + +148,234 + 7934 = 181,066 | 25,646 + 6566 + 2599 + +187 + 0 = 34,998 | 6696 + 10,548 + 15,066 + +18,515 + 11,671 = 62,496 | 278,600 |
Case | NG (M€) | Electricity (M€) | CO2 Em Gain (M€) | Total (M€) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Base | 424 + 1098 + 2515 + + 12,696 + 1225 = 17,958 | 1132 + 388 + 212 + + 19 + 0 = 1751 | - | 19,700 |
b4 | 69 + 167 + 371 + 2032 + 206 = 2845 | 3268 + 1092 + 415 + +105 + 0 = 4880 | 2217 | 5508 (7730 without CO2 em gain) |
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Noro, M.; Busato, F. Energy Saving, Energy Efficiency or Renewable Energy: Which Is Better for the Decarbonization of the Residential Sector in Italy? Energies 2023, 16, 3556. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16083556
Noro M, Busato F. Energy Saving, Energy Efficiency or Renewable Energy: Which Is Better for the Decarbonization of the Residential Sector in Italy? Energies. 2023; 16(8):3556. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16083556
Chicago/Turabian StyleNoro, Marco, and Filippo Busato. 2023. "Energy Saving, Energy Efficiency or Renewable Energy: Which Is Better for the Decarbonization of the Residential Sector in Italy?" Energies 16, no. 8: 3556. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16083556
APA StyleNoro, M., & Busato, F. (2023). Energy Saving, Energy Efficiency or Renewable Energy: Which Is Better for the Decarbonization of the Residential Sector in Italy? Energies, 16(8), 3556. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16083556