IEA SHC Task 42 / ECES Annex 29 – A Simple Tool for the Economic Evaluation of Thermal Energy Storages
Author(s) -
Christoph Rathgeber,
Stefan Hiebler,
E. Lävemann,
Pablo Dolado,
Ana Lázaro,
Jaume Gasia,
Álvaro de Gracia,
Laia Miró,
Luisa F. Cabeza,
Andreas König-Haagen,
Dieter Brüggemann,
Álvaro CamposCelador,
Erwin Franquet,
Benjamin Fumey,
Mark Dannemand,
Thomas Badenhop,
J. Diriken,
Jan Erik Nielsen,
Andreas Hauer
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
energy procedia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.474
H-Index - 81
ISSN - 1876-6102
DOI - 10.1016/j.egypro.2016.06.203
Subject(s) - thermal energy storage , capital cost , energy storage , environmental economics , payback period , task (project management) , process engineering , environmental science , engineering , production (economics) , economics , electrical engineering , ecology , power (physics) , physics , macroeconomics , systems engineering , quantum mechanics , biology
Within the framework of IEA SHC Task 42 / ECES Annex 29, a simple tool for the economic evaluation of thermal energy storages has been developed and tested on various existing storages. On that account, the storage capacity costs (costs per installed storage capacity) of thermal energy storages have been evaluated via a Top-down and a Bottom-up approach. The Top-down approach follows the assumption that the costs of energy supplied by the storage should not exceed the costs of energy from the market. The maximum acceptable storage capacity costs depend on the interest rate assigned to the capital costs, the intended payback period of the user class (e.g. industry or building), the reference energy costs, and the annual number of storage cycles. The Bottom-up approach focuses on the realised storage capacity costs of existing storages. The economic evaluation via Top-down and Bottom-up approach is a valuable tool to make a rough estimate of the economic viability of an energy storage for a specific application. An important finding is that the annual number of storage cycles has the largest influence on the cost effectiveness. At present and with respect to the investigated storages, seasonal heat storage is only economical via large sensible hot water storages. Contrary, if the annual number of storage cycles is sufficiently high, all thermal energy storage technologies can become competitive
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