Title of article
Assessing the sustainability of the UK society using thermodynamic concepts: Part 2
Author/Authors
Alexandros Gasparatos، نويسنده , , Alexandros and El-Haram، نويسنده , , Mohamed and Horner، نويسنده , , Malcolm، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
15
From page
956
To page
970
Abstract
By building on the first part of our analysis, this second part attempts to provide a further understanding of the UK societyʹs metabolism, its impact and offer policy suggestions that could promote a shift towards sustainability. The methodologies employed in this second part include Exergy Analysis (EA) and Extended Exergy Analysis (EEA). Exergy inputs and outputs amounted to 17423.9 and 11888.7 PJ, respectively, with energy carries, mainly fossil fuels, being both the predominant inputs (15597.1 PJ) and outputs (5147.1 PJ). Exergy consumption and efficiency for various economic sectors and subsectors have been calculated with the residential and service sector showing the lowest exergy conversion efficiencies (11.2% and 12.3%, respectively) while certain industrial subsectors, such as the aluminium and iron/steel industries showed the highest exergy conversion factors (67.0 and 62.1%). Extended exergy efficiencies were somewhat different owing to the different calculation procedure. Extended exergy efficiencies were 91.4% for the extraction sector, 38.9% for the conversion sector, 49.1% for the agriculture sector, 31.5% for the transportation sector, 38.6% for the industrial sector and 80.0% for the tertiary sector.
Keywords
UK , Exergy analysis , Extended exergy analysis
Journal title
Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews
Record number
1498687
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