The GRETA project: the contribution of near-surface geothermal energy for the energetic self-sufficiency of Alpine regions
Author(s) -
Alessandro Casasso,
Bruno Piga,
Rajandrea Sethi,
Joerg Prestor,
Simona Pestotnik,
Magdalena Bottig,
Gregor Goetzl,
Pietro Zambelli,
Valentina D’Alonzo,
Roberto Vaccaro,
Pietro Capodaglio,
Marcela Olmedo,
Alessandro Baietto,
Charles Maragna,
Fabian Böttcher,
Kai Zoesseder
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
acque sotterranee-italian journal of groundwater
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2280-6458
pISSN - 1828-454X
DOI - 10.7343/as-2017-265
Subject(s) - geothermal energy , renewable energy , geothermal gradient , work (physics) , tourism , greenhouse gas , geography , exploit , energy consumption , climate change , geothermal heating , environmental protection , environmental science , earth science , natural resource economics , engineering , geology , archaeology , economics , computer science , mechanical engineering , oceanography , computer security , geophysics , electrical engineering
The Alpine regions are deeply involved in the challenge set by climate change, which is a threat for their environment and for important economic activities such as tourism. The heating and cooling of buildings account for a major share of the total primary energy consumption in Europe, and hence the energy policies should focus on this sector to achieve the greenhouse gas reduction targets set by international agreements. Geothermal heat pump is one of the least carbon-intensive technologies for the heating and cooling of buildings. It exploits the heat stored within the ground, a local renewable energy source which is widely available across the Alpine territory. Nevertheless, it has been little considered by European policies and cooperation projects. GRETA (near-surface Geothermal REsources in the Territory of the Alpine space) is a cooperation project funded by the EU INTERREG-Alpine Space program, aiming at demonstrating the potential of shallow geothermal energy and to foster its integration into energy planning instruments. It started in December 2015 and will last three years, involving 12 partners from Italy, France, Switzerland, Germany, Austria, and Slovenia. In this paper, the project is presented, along with the results of the first year of work
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