Presentation Flexible Heatpumps

ENCORE meeting: 17-12-2020 Mark Kremer

Central question:

Can Smurfit Kappi shorten the Payback Period of an investment in a Heatpump by operating it in a flexible manner?

Flexible operations on imbalance market

Benefiting from fluctuations in electricity market prices by ramping the asset up- and down (increasing and decreasing the electricity consumption).

Imbalance prices are very volatile, with prices below -100 and above 200 €/MWh on a daily basis.

It is possible to benefit from these fluctiations, if you have flexibility

In this case we are looking at a hybrid set-up of a Steamboiler and a Heatpump

Simulations & mathematical modelling

Casestudies

5 main scenario's

  1. Steamboiler only (baseline, baseload)
  2. Heatpump only (stand-alone, baseload, without SDE++)
  3. Heatpump + SDE
  4. Heatpump + SDE + Steam boiler (hybrid set-up) on Imbalance market
  5. Heatpump + SDE + Steam boiler (hybrid set-up) on aFRR (secondary reserve market)

Besides that, we modelled 11 sensitivities:

Smurfit Kappa case

The model is based on the context of Smurfit Kappa (paper factory)

Heat pump

COP roughly between 4 and 1.5, depending on load, Tsource and Tsink

Optimisation

Some example days:

Steamboiler only is following demand pattern

Similar pattern for heatpump only case

Hybrid set-up is responding to price fluctuactions, steam boiler taking over at high prices

Business case

CAPEX of around 6 M€ (200.000 €/MW), which need to be earned back by savings in operating costs

Resulting in a Payback Period of 5.4 years without subsidy, and 1.8 years with subsidy

The added value of the optimisation is limited (in absolute terms), which is explained by the high COP of the heatpump

Sensitivities

If CAPEX is 200%, subsidy is needed to keep a good Payback Time

Subsidies are protecting the business case againsts low CO2 prices

Conclusions