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Exploring the link between the EU emissions trading system and net-zero emission neighbourhoods

Abstract

Climate policy is transforming the energy system and the building sector. Since these sectors overlap, we need to understand how the short-term operational link between them impact their long-term development subject to overlapping climate policies. This paper investigates how the integrated development of the European heat and electricity system is influenced by net-zero emission neighbourhoods that compensate own carbon emissions with local renewable energy. The study is made in the context of EUs emission trading system. In our approach, we soft-link two mathematical programming models to couple energy transition policies at the European level with the neighbourhood scale. Results suggest that zero emission neighbourhoods make European decarbonisation more cost-efficient. When low carbon energy technologies in neighbourhoods become competitive, investments in large-scale technologies are reduced on the European level, including nuclear and fossil gas power and heating. Thus, early policy support to neighbourhood technologies could prevent stranded assets later in the transition. Further, results imply that more stringent emission caps earlier could help avoiding CO2 allowance price spikes later. © 2022 The Author(s)
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Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Community / Architectural Engineering
  • SINTEF Energy Research / Energisystemer
  • Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Year

2022

Published in

Energy and Buildings

ISSN

0378-7788

Volume

281

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository