horizon 2020 energy efficiency information day 12 december 2014 parallel session: energy efficiency...
TRANSCRIPT
Horizon 2020 Energy Efficiency Information Day
12 December 2014
Parallel session:Energy Efficiency in Industry (large companies and SMEs) – Topics EE16 and EE18
EASME Project Advisors:Emilio Font de Mora, Céline Tougeron
Agenda
15:50 – 16:05 Policy Context: Energy Efficiency in IndustrySerena Pontoglio
16:05 – 16:30 EE16 – Organisational innovation to increase energy efficiency in industryCéline TougeronEE18 – New technologies for utilization of heat recovery in large industrial systemEmilio Font de Mora
16:30 – 17:00 Q&A
EE16 – The challenge
• Further reduce the energy consumption of the industry sector and improve its competitiveness
• Additional gains possible thanks to existing cost-effective energy solutions and new affordable intelligent energy solutions
EE16 – The scope (1/4)
Proposals should:
• Focus on removing market barriers, in particular lack of expertise and information on energy management;
• Put in place mechanisms to secure funding for energy efficiency investments & facilitate the continuation of the activities beyond the project lifetime
EE16 – The scope (2/4)
Proposals should:
• Primarily address the uptake of cross-cutting innovative technologies
• Consider total-site energy management schemes and system optimization methodologies
• Prioritise energy-intensive industries.
EE16 – The scope (3/4)
Where appropriate or cost effective, proposals should:
• Encourage use of renewable energies and waste heat recovery,
• Consider high energy consumption processes where appropriate.
EE16 – The scope (4/4)
The following areas can also be funded (individually or in combination):
• Industrial system efficiency benchmarking: • Development of sector-specific technology
pathways towards 2050 to target the most energy-intensive industrial sectors;
• Energy management in SMEs and industry• Human and organizational challenges
EE16 – The expected impacts (1/2)
• For capacity building project, every 1 million euro of EU support should increase the skills of hundreds of people working in the sector and result in savings of at least 25 GWh per year.
EE16 – The expected impacts (2/2)
Demonstration of a significant impact in terms of:• improved competitiveness• larger investments made by stakeholders in
sustainable energy• primary energy savings• better implementation of efficiency policy• number of policy makers influenced • number of people with increased skills• number of people changing their behaviour
EE16 – To keep in mind
• Single stage evaluation• Type of action: Coordination and Support
Action• Recommended EU contribution: EUR 1,5 to
2 million per project
EE16 - The lessons learnt from the evaluations of the Call 2014
The main weaknesses identified:
• Limited innovative concepts • Methodology issues• Access to finance for the actual implementation of
energy efficiency upgrades not sufficiently addressed
• Impacts
EE18 – New technologies for utilisation of heat recovery in large industrial systems considering the whole energy cycle from heat production to transformation, delivery and end use
TRL4-7
RIA
• Reduce energy use in industrial processes and in H&C by utilising surplus heat/waste heat, increasing economic competitiveness of waste heat recovery and developing ready-made new practical solutions tested in real-word conditions
EE18 – The challenge
• Research & demonstration on technologies, technical and operational approaches to recover waste heat from: • industrial processes, • material flows originating in industrial processes or • plant perimeters,
and to transform it into useful energy forms• Methodologies & equipment should be subjected to full
scale validation at demo sites in industrial facilities (real-world conditions)
EE18 – The scope (1/2)
R&D main subjects: • Technical, organisational and operational solutions for
internal process use, internal or external plant use;• Integration & optimisation of the heat chain including fuel
substitution and efficient use of heat; • Evaluating waste heat potentials internal & externally;• Advanced control & operation techniques, automation and
safety measures and protocols;• Adaptable heat recovery modules;• Advanced co- and tri-generation, energy cascading;• Solutions for non-technical issues
EE18 – The scope (2/2)
Design, development & demonstration of economically viable solutions that recover at least 15% of process heat
Technical, organisational & operational adaptable modules Perceived & business risks reduced Widespread uptake of the solutions with a high impact in
several industry sectors – large replication potential Easy integration in current industrial landscape Turn-key solutions with appropriate pay-back time
EE18 – The expected impacts
Main weaknesses identified:• Technologies at a very preliminary research stage, not
credibly leading to demonstration • Stated impacts not credible, not sufficiently supported by
solid evidence• Quality of implementation not sufficient, lacking details;
structure not fully clear• Not sufficient information of the resources allocated • Low participation of target industries
EE18 – The lessons learnt from the evaluations of the Call 2014
Single stage evaluation Type of action: Research and Innovation action
The threshold for the criteria Excellence & Impact will be 4 out of 5.
The overall threshold will be 12 out of 15
Recommended EU contribution: EUR 3-4 million per project Indicative budget: EUR 8m (implemented under SPIRE PPP)
EE18 – Specific conditions for this call
TRL4-7
RIA
Thank you very much for your attention
For more information:[email protected]
Horizon 2020 documents: http://ec.europa.eu/research/horizon2020/index_en.cfm?pg=h2020-documents
FAQ EE Call: http://ec.europa.eu/easme/sites/easme-site/files/documents/H2020-Energy-Efficiency-FAQ.pdf