02/01/2023
Source: Energy & Management Powernews
The 2021 Main Report of the District Heating Association AGFW was prepared with the Fraunhofer Institute for Manufacturing Technology and Applied Materials Research (IFAM). He sees much need for expansion.
On January 31, the district heating association AGFW published its new main report on the development of district heating in Germany. The figures show that in district heating networks the share of climate-neutral heat generation, consisting of renewable energies and waste, is already 30 percent. This is twice as good as the rest of the heating sector, which averages 13 percent climate-neutral heat generation, said Karen Janßen of the Fraunhofer Institute for Manufacturing Technology and Applied Materials Research (IFAM).
The institute was involved for the first time in the main report, which has been collected since 1971. Thus, in addition to the AGFW's member survey, data from the state statistical offices were included, as well as from the Federal Network Agency, the Federal Ministry of Economics, the Federal Heat Pump Association, and the Agency for Renewable Energy (AEE).
As much as 30 percent of district heating is climate-neutral
The data collected for the report serve as a basis for current statements on the district heating industry and for the further design of the heat transition. "Today, 14 percent of German households are supplied with district heating," AGFW President Hansjörg Roll summed up. According to the goals of federal policy for climate neutrality by 2045, this figure must continue to rise in the coming years. "According to the plans of the German government, the heating market of the future should be dominated by two technologies: climate-neutral district heating and heat pumps," Roll said.
"The main report provides the data basis for the progressive transformation of the district heating sector towards climate neutrality," he explained further. In the past, he said, the heat transformation was driven by the companies. With the municipal heat planning, which is prescribed and promoted by the legislator, a new drive would now come, Roll hopes.