What is District Cooling?
District
cooling is defined as “one cooling network, distributing chilled water to more
than one building.” This definition has some, but not total, market acceptance,
as the interviews indicated. The term is also defined elsewhere as one cooling
network, distributing cooling water to more than one customer. At first glance,
these definitions do not seem to be much different. But the alternative
definition excludes facilities like airports, hospitals, and universities, where
cooling is distributed to only one customer managing several buildings.
The same
basic concept underlies district cooling and district heating. Both distribute
centrally generated energy to large or small communities through a pipe
network. Both are subsumed under the umbrella term “district energy.”
District
cooling systems, large or small, produce energy at one or more central
production sites and use many different cooling technologies, including
individual chiller, combined heating and cooling, and combined cooling,
heating, and power (CCHP) systems (Figure 1). The technologies, energy sources,
and combinations of these are described in some detail in section IV of this
report.
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| figure 1: District cooling system |
The main benefits provided by district cooling systems are:
• multi-energy
systems, using several energy sources (including energy from waste) and thus
optimizing resource availability and reducing operating and environmental
costs;
• optimized
capital expenses, as a result of variations in operating scale and in load
demand;
• optimized
operating expenses, through increased system efficiency;
• centralized
system management, operation, and maintenance by capable and efficient
professionals, optimizing the life-cycle cost; and
• high
system efficiency, with low use of primary energy and reduced emissions.
In sum, a district cooling system is an energy generation
and distribution system that offers substantive efficiency gains by virtue of
its larger scale (compared with individual cooling solutions); the possibility
of using several energy sources and thus improving environmental and cost
performance; and the potential for integration with other energy systems, such
as district heating, steam, power distribution, and gas systems.
On the other hand, although district cooling systems can be
considered successful worldwide and the technologies are mature, many
challenges stand in the way of their adoption. The socioeconomic benefits,
often long term and related to energy and environmental efficiency, are not
always reflected in specific business cases or at the individual business
level. Initial investments are relatively high, and rely on initiatives from
governmental bodies and investors, rather than individuals.
Moreover, cooling, unlike heating, water, and electricity,
is often perceived as a luxury or comfort service, rather than a basic utility
need.
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info@bilkargroup.com
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