DocumentCode :
1713308
Title :
Emission Assessment of Distributed Generation in Urban Areas
Author :
Chicco, Gianfranco ; Mancarella, Pierluigi ; Napoli, Roberto
Author_Institution :
Dipt. di Ing. Elettr., Politec. di Torino, Turin
fYear :
2007
Firstpage :
532
Lastpage :
537
Abstract :
The increasing diffusion of distributed generation within urban areas calls for deeper analyses aimed at evaluating the sustainability of energy generation and its environmental impact. In particular, cogeneration technologies enable enhanced energy efficiency and thus CO2 emission saving with respect to the conventional separate production of heat and electricity. However, the distributed cogeneration production could dramatically worsen the air quality on a local level, due to emissions of various hazardous pollutants such as NO2, CO, and so on. In addition, in urban areas the air quality regulation could be quite stringent, thus calling for a thorough environmental impact assessment at the planning stage. In this paper, the emission characteristics of distributed cogeneration are evaluated with respect to the conventional separate production of heat and electricity on the global and local levels through the emission balance approach. The analysis is carried out with reference to small-scale (below 1 MWe) distributed generation technologies available on the market, such as microturbines and internal combustion engines. In particular, after evaluating the emission break-even conditions for equivalence between distributed and centralized generation, it is shown how the specific results may depend upon the plant operation characteristics (at partial load) and upon the reference values for emission assessment. These aspects could be particularly relevant for energy policy formulations.
Keywords :
air pollution; cogeneration; distributed power generation; environmental factors; air quality; cogeneration technology; distributed generation; emission assessment; emission break-even condition; energy generation sustainability; environmental impact assessment; heat-and-electricity production; urban areas; Air pollution; Cogeneration; Distributed control; Distributed power generation; Energy efficiency; Internal combustion engines; Production; Resistance heating; Urban areas; Urban planning; air pollutants; cogeneration; distributed generation; environmental impact; local and global emissions;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Power Tech, 2007 IEEE Lausanne
Conference_Location :
Lausanne
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2189-3
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2190-9
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PCT.2007.4538373
Filename :
4538373
Link To Document :
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