Renewables

Sarajevo to introduce heat pumps technology in district heating system

sarajevo toplotne pumpe ebrd grejanje

Foto: isovicemir from Pixabay

Published

December 6, 2022

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

December 6, 2022

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Bosnia and Herzegovina’s capital Sarajevo is preparing projects to install heat pumps for the district heating system to reduce air pollution and the use of fossil fuels.

The initiative for introducing heat pumps in Sarajevo is a joint activity of city authorities and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD).

The district heating system in Sarajevo uses natural gas or heavy fuel oil, while homes not connected to the system are heated using firewood or coal. As a consequence, heating is the main contributor to the city’s poor air quality.

According to the Future of Heat Pumps report, which the International Energy Agency recently published, the city authorities and EBRD are discussing two projects to introduce large‐scale centralized water‐source heat pumps.

Heat pumps will use wastewater, and drinking water

A EUR 25 million project involves the construction of an 18 MW heat pump plant utilizing treated wastewater at an average year‐round temperature of 10 degrees Celsius from a nearby wastewater treatment plant. The second project, which would cost around EUR 21 million, involves the construction of a 21 MW heat pump plant utilizing city drinking water at an average year‐round temperature of 12 degrees Celsius.

According to the report, if the projects are implemented, the share of heat pump‐based generation in Sarajevo’s district heating network would reach nearly 40%.

A second phase of the project is also under consideration

Final investment decisions are expected to be made in the first quarter of 2023. A second phase could provide 18 MW of additional capacity from the city’s wastewater.

The two projects under development would reduce CO2 emissions by as much as 16 kilotonnes per year and help address concerns about the cost and security of natural gas supplies triggered by the current energy crisis, according to The Future of Heat Pumps report.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

wind farm ljubusa tomislavgrad

Concession signed for 80 MW wind farm in Tomislavgrad

22 November 2024 - Alpha Wind has been granted a concession to build the 80 MW Ljubuša wind farm in the municipality of Tomislavgrad.

Dentons advises EnergoNuclear EPCM deal Cernavoda

Dentons advises EnergoNuclear on EPCM deal for Cernavodă project

22 November 2024 - Dentons advised EnergoNuclear on an engineering, procurement, and construction management (EPCM) contract for Cernavodă 3 and 4

eurelectric cybersecurity measures study

Cyberattacks in energy sector doubled from 2020 to 2022

22 November 2024 - Cyberattacks are increasing the risk of blackouts, disruptions and significant societal issues, according to Eurelectric’s latest report

Greece, EU establish Islands Decarbonization Fund

Greece establishes Islands Decarbonization Fund with EU

22 November 2024 - The Islands Decarbonization Fund was launched in Naxos, with financing from the European Investment Bank