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EPEE roundtable on national energy and climate plans
Andrea Voigt, EPEE Director General
Sept.
2019
Montreal
Who is EPEE?
Founded in 2000, headquartered in Brussels
Currently 48 members from three continents:• OEMs : heat pumps, a/c,
refrigeration• Component manufacturers• Gas producers• Installers• National & international
associations
EU
Japan
USA
South Korea + China
1.5°C Paris Climate AgreementEU 2050 Decarbonisation StrategyEU 2030 Targets
Affordability of solutions and quality of life for all Europeans have never been more important
The EU is going through a total transformation ofits energy system, culture and consumption habits
Tracking progress towards 2020 & 2030More efforts are required!
Renewables__ share…. trajectory directive- - - trajectory national action plans
Energy Efficiency*:__ primary energy cons. vs. 2005- - - linear path
Greenhouse Gases:__ emission reduction vs. 1990- - - projections w/ existing measueres… w/ additional measures
*graph shows relative change vs. 2005; absolute targets = 20% reduction in 2020 and 32.5% in 2030
2020 targets
2030 targets
20%
-13%*
-20%
32%
-26%*
-40%
17%
-9%
-22%
78%
9%
10%3%
Energy
Industrial Processes
Agriculture
Waste
CO2 contributes 96% to the energyrelated greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and 90% is from fuelcombustion
The important role of energy
72%
Of the EU‘s primaryenergy consumption isstill based on fossil fuels
29%Of the EU‘s electricityproduction is based on renewables
17%Of the EU‘s final energyconsumption is basedon renewables
➔ Energy efficiency needs to increase
➔ Fossil fuels in the primary energy mix must bereduced substantially
➔ The share of renewables in the electricity mix and in final energy consumption needs tofurther increase
EU GHG emissions by sector
Where do we stand with heating and cooling?
No 1
Of the EU‘s final energyis used for heating &
cooling, of which up to6% is currently for
cooling
Of the EU‘s final energyused for heating & cooling is based on
renewables.
Heating & Cooling is thenumber 1 consumer of
renewable energy in Europe, followed by
electricity and transport.
50%
19%
Of the EU‘s final energy consumptionin the tertiary sectoris already today usedfor space cooling.
12%
X 2
By 2030, the numberof air-conditionersand refrigerators isexpected to double in Europe.
By 2050, with business as usual, the cooling demand in the EU‘s residential sector is expected to be 4 x higher than in 2015
X 4
Where to from here?
Cooling Needs
Energy Efficiency
RenewableEnergies
Carbon neutrality
With an integrated approach on cooling and heating
Reduce
ImproveShift
Enable
NECPs: Top 5 priorities for heating and cooling
Technical Building
Systems (TBS)
Market Surveillance
F-Gas Regulation
Smart HVACR
Thermal energy
Full implementation of the EPBD: Tap into the potential of TBS for new builds and in view of long-term renovation strategies (see next slide)
Ensure stronger and more effective marketsurveillance on Ecodesign & Energy Labelling requirements
Implement properly the F-Gas Regulation, e.g. dissuasivefines, border controls, reporting, etc.
Incentivize smart HVACR via schemes such as dynamic pricing, etc. to provide cost-attractive flexibility to the grid
Incentivize thermal energy recovery byvalorising heatgenerated by coolingsystems 5
A focus on the EPBD: Technical Building Systems (TBS)
Inspections & Maintenance
BACS & Monitoring
EPB Standards
Part Load Efficiency
High Efficiency products
A focus on the F-Gas Regulation: HFC phase-down
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
Direct HFC emissions in Mt CO2-eq
With the F-Gas Regulation and MAC Directive , HFC emissions have started to decrease since 2014
1.5 GtCO2-eq
Expected cumulativeemission savings by 2030
Count on Cooling#CountOnCooling
Implement and enforce EU laws
Promote an integrated approach
Reward sustainableinvestments
Inform, empower and motivate consumers
Upskill installers
Our call on policy makers
Promote national implementationand enforcement of EU Laws
Ensure that cooling and an integrated approach with heating is includedin National Energy & Climate Plans (NECPs) & Long term strategies (LTS)
Advocate at EU level for national heating & cooling strategies
Take an integrated approach
Encourage synergies between heating and cooling such as heat recoveryfrom cooling systems or the use of heat pumps that are able to provideheating and cooling
Encourage demand side management and thermal storage via heatingand cooling systems to provide flexibility for the grid
Inform, empower and motivateconsumers
Strengthen tools to raise awareness on energy efficiency (Energy labelsfor buildings and products, metering, etc.)
Support the deployment of smart appliances by rewarding flexibility
Reward sustainable finance
Develop a framework to drive investments into sustainable solutions for consumers, business and investors
Ensure sustainable public spending (taxation, electricity prices, subsidies) and put an end to subsidising fossil fuels
Upskill installers
Provide lifelong learning to keep up with technological developments
Ensure the adaptation of the curriculum to match the industry’s evolving needs
Recognise the sector’s specificity through the allocation of a dedicated code in the NACE statistical classification
Contact:
EPEE46 Avenue des Arts1000 Brussels, Belgium
secretariat@epeeglobal.orga.voigt@epeeglobal.orgwww.epeeglobal.org@EPEESecretariat@AndreaVoigt2305
Thank you for your attention!
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