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Applications
Three categories
account for the vast majority of CHP applications:
CHP has a long history within the industrial sector,
which has large concurrent heat and power demands,
and which also has by far the greatest installed capacity
(in terms of electricity production)
of the three applications. District heating also uses CHP systems
extensively, providing heat for countries with long heating seasons
and increasingly cooling during the summer months. However, advancements
in technology development have led to the availability of smaller
CHP systems, with reduced costs, reduced emissions and greater
customisation. As a result, CHP systems are increasingly used
for smaller applications in the commercial and institutional sectors,
and are being incorporated more often into DHC systems. The following
table summarises these applications.
CHP Applications
| Feature | CHP – INDUSTRIAL | CHP – COMMERCIAL
/ INSTITUTIONAL |
DISTRICT HEATING AND COOLING |
| Typical customers | Chemical, pulp and paper, metallurgy, heavy processing (food, textile, timber, minerals), brewing, coke ovens, glass furnaces, oil refining | Light manufacturing, hotels, hospitals, large urban office buildings, agricultural operations | All buildings within reach of heat network, including office buildings, individual houses, campuses, airports, industry |
| Ease of integration with renewables and waste energy | Moderate – High (particularly industrial energy waste streams) | Low – moderate | High |
| Temperature level | High | Low to medium | Low to medium |
| Typical system size | 1 – 500 MWe | 1 kWe – 10 MWe | Any |
| Typical prime mover | Steam turbine, gas turbine, reciprocating engine (compression ignition), combined cycle (larger systems) | Reciprocating engine (spark ignition) , stirling engines, fuel cells, micro-turbines | Steam turbine, gas turbine, waste incineration, CCGT |
| Energy / Fuel Source | Any liquid, gaseous or solid fuels; industrial process waste gases (eg blast furnace gases, coke oven waste gases) | Liquid or gaseous fuels | Any fuel |
| Main Players | Industry (power utilities) | End users and utilities | Include local community ESCOs, local and national utilities and industry |
| Ownership | Joint ventures/ third party |
Joint ventures/ third party |
From full private to full public and part public / private, including utilities, industry and municipalities |
| Heat / electricity load patterns |
User- and process-specific | User-specific | Daily and seasonal fluctuations mitigated by load management and heat storage |