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The Sustainable Energy Authority of Ireland (SEAI) has published the Interim National Energy Balance for 2023, which tells us how much energy Ireland used, and where it came from last year. 

National energy related emissions decreased by 7.3%, reaching their lowest level in 30 years. It is critically important to recognise the impact of current actions in increasing energy efficiency and renewable energy and the importance of accelerating these activities. Ireland is not yet on track to remain within its 2021-2025 carbon budget.

Analysis indicates that our only chance to meet our overall emissions targets depends on even higher annual reductions of over 11% for 2024 and 2025.         

Increased use of electricity imported

SEAI estimates that emissions from electricity generation were down by 21% in 2023, due to increased use of electricity imported through international interconnectors and increased renewable generation in Ireland. 

2023 set a record for the net import of electricity through interconnectors, with a 12-fold increase on the previous year, meaning Ireland used less fossil generation than in 2022. The net import of electricity through interconnectors accounted for 9.5% of electricity supply in 2023, making it the third largest source of electricity in Ireland after natural gas and wind. 

In 2023, Ireland set new highs for wind generation, solar generation, heat-pump installations, EV registrations, and biofuel blending. This progress is very welcome, but it is important we rapidly build on this to achieve significant and sustained increases in these technologies across Ireland.

For example, while solar electricity generation increased by over 300% in 2023, it still accounted for just 1.9% of Ireland’s electricity supply. And a new record of 11.7 TWh of wind generation was set in 2023 (the extra wind generation recorded in 2023 is equivalent to the electricity needs of 115,000 homes).

Yet Ireland needs to install 27% more wind capacity to reach its 2025 milestone. Ireland remains heavily dependent on both fossil fuels and imported energy, with over 80% of energy coming from fossil fuels, and almost 80% of energy imported.

Margie McCarthy, director of research and policy insights at SEAI said: Firstly, the reduction in energy-related emissions in 2023 is encouraging, it shows movement in the right direction in some sectors. It is clear from the data that pace is critical. We have no time to wait. SEAI’s mission is to be at the heart of Ireland’s energy revolution, and that revolution needs fast action right across Irish society to meet our legally binding climate targets.

Increased government supports

"We must redouble our collective efforts to reduce our reliance on fossil fuels. This must be driven by increased government supports, full and timely realisation of our climate action plans, and importantly support from wider society through citizen and community action. We will only create the change needed if we tackle this together as an urgent priority.”

Transport is an area where collective action is needed urgently. There has been increased demand and emissions from transport in 2023, with an almost full return to pre-COVID levels of petrol and diesel demand.

Ireland used 1.36 billion litres of jet kerosene in 2023, the highest annual energy demand in air travel ever recorded, up 12.7% on the previous year. Curbing transport will require better land use planning, a meaningful shift towards active travel and public transport, and more efficient and renewable modes of private transport. We need behaviours to change and services in place to support them.

 

Record 7% decrease in energy related emissions in 2023, says SEAI

Ireland Electrified has been officially launched as it aims to advocate for policies that will accelerate the electrification of the country’s heating and transport sector, cutting our carbon emissions and strengthening Irish energy security. 

The event was chaired by the new chairperson of Ireland Electrified, Donall O’Brien who was joined by Brian Leddin TD, chairperson of the Joint Oireachtas Committee on Environment and Climate Action and featured speakers from the IDA, the SEAI and the Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment. 

Build an energy system

The launch coincided with Ireland’s efforts to increase the amount of renewable electricity generated to power our communities and build an energy system that will provide a more secure future for our families.

Environment minister Eamon Ryan TD, said: “Ireland Electrified is an important voice which will be working to support the delivery of government policies and of targets in the Climate Action Plan around electrification.

“Electricity will go from 20% of the energy system now to about 80% of the energy system in the second half of this century, allowing a far cleaner, efficient and indigenous energy system that will benefit all of our citizens

“It is important that the industry players have a robust and united voice in the debate on how best to achieve this.”

Donall O’Brien, chairperson of Ireland Electrified, said: “We are excited to launch Ireland Electrified as we see it as an opportunity to bring industry together to respond to the climate emergency and to empower communities and small businesses to be leaders in our electrification revolution.

“A central part of any plan to cut our carbon emissions and to end our dependency on imported fossil fuels must be to electrify our heat and transport systems.

“We will be developing policies that encourage the transition away from fossil fuels and incentivise greater use of electricity, especially for heat and transport. We will be seeking quicker connections for electrification where companies can be flexible in their demand, a review of electricity pass-through costs, better utilisation of the electricity we are already producing for the grid and improved EV charging infrastructure.

Second electrification revolution

“Whether it is increasing our usage of electric vehicles, electrifying public transport or installing heat pumps, we are looking for new members to join us in Ireland’s second electrification revolution.”

Ireland Electrified brings together organisations and businesses that use electricity for heat and transport, including electricity generators, technology companies, installers and manufacturers.

Major energy players in Ireland have already joined Ireland Electrified including EM3, Mullan Grid, Bord na Móna and ESB and the association is actively seeking new members to become part of Ireland’s energy revolution.

Donall O’ Brien, chair of Ireland Electrified, concluded: “We look forward to working with our members to build a collective voice that will support and shape government policy on electrification and build an Ireland decarbonised, an Ireland energised, an Ireland Electrified.”

Further information about Ireland Electrified is available at https://irelandelectrified.ie/.

 

Ireland Electrified unveiled

Pyramp is engaged in the development of new technologies that have the potential to play a significant role in addressing the climate crisis. 

The team at Pyramp – a soon-to-be spun-out venture from TU Dublin – has developed a thermophotovoltaic (TPV) technology to generate electricity from industrial waste heat. 

Spearheading the transformation of waste heat into electricity, Pyramp’s innovative thermophotovoltaic (TPV) technology offers a modular, low-maintenance solution for high-temperature industries like cement, steel, glass, and ceramics.

Pyramp emerged from a groundbreaking collaboration in 2019, leveraging Iftekhar Hussain’s PhD research. Key milestones include successful market validation, securing funding, and gaining traction with major industry players in the cement and glass industries.

Strategic edge in high-temperature processes

Addressing the challenge of 'difficult to abate' emissions, Pyramp’s TPV technology converts industrial waste heat into electricity efficiently. The modular design and patented spectrally selective emitter material give Pyramp a strategic edge in high-temperature processes.

TPV devices operate quite similarly to solar PV, except instead of using solar energy, heat is converted into electricity with a superior energy density. 

“We are addressing a key sustainability issue,” says Hussain. “We are the only company to offer heat to electricity generation at temperatures of more than 1,000 degrees Celsius. We are the hottest startup in Ireland!

“Instead of converting visible light to electricity, TPV converts the infrared part of the spectrum. And while the sun is around 150 million kilometres from the earth, our system can be placed as close as one metre away from the heat source. With solar, you can get 200 watts per square metre of panels on a good sunny day. With TPV you can get 12 to 20 kilowatts. It’s an order of magnitude higher than solar PV.”

"We go beyond mere heat recovery; we actively contribute to the sustainability of high-temperature industries," says Hussain. 

Questions and answers

  1. Will a TPV device take energy from the process I care about? “Not if the location is appropriately selected. TPV converts Infrared light into electricity and so by design aims to minimise the absorption of heat from hot gasses.”
  2. How resilient is the device, what is the lifetime? “In the application for TPV there is very little UV. The lifespan depends on the location. So long as the device is designed to tolerate the environmental (dust, cycles, corrosion, etc) then a lifetime comparable to that of photovoltaic cells, i.e. circa 20 years, can be expected.”
  3. What is the power density and efficiency? “The power output and efficiency depend on the temperature of the heat source, the distance it is from the Pyramp device and the surrounding air temperature at the device. For cement, the power density is expected to be ~4kW/m2 and for glass this can be as high if not higher than 12kW/m2. Theoretical models for steel indicate similar power densities to glass.
  4. At what temperature range can a TPV operate? “If the heat source is hot enough it will emit light, the hotter the heat source the higher the efficiency. Generally, the system power break-even point occurs at ~1000°C but this can be lower if the hot gases surrounding the device are colder. A suitable temperature range at this time is limited to between 1000°C and 1600°C.”

Key statistics

  • High-temperature process industries reject approximately 50% of their thermal energy into the environment as waste heat;
  • Cement, steel and glass industries are motivated to meet emission reduction targets because they are responsible for approximately 20% of the world’s CO2 emissions;
  • Pyramp can cause 1,200 million tonnes less carbon to be emitted into the atmosphere by 2050 if we succeed in recovering the waste heat from the world’s 3400 cement, steel and float glass plants;
  • A Pyramp panel has approximately 50 times more energy density than any solar PV module;
  • Waste heat recovery market is estimated to be approximately $60bn/year that is growing by 9% each year.

Originally from Bangladesh, Hussain has been working in the renewable energy area for some years and studied at the University of Kingston in London before coming to Ireland in 2014 to begin work on a PhD at TU Dublin.

Having developed and patented a material to improve the efficiency of solar PV systems, he began to look at the potential commercial application of TPV for industrial waste heat recovery. “We received Commercialisation Fund support [from Enterprise Ireland] in 2021.

"That allowed us to start derisking the technology and to deploy small prototypes to test in industrial settings. In 2023, we were approved for a second round of funding to further de-risk the technology. We are hoping to spin out the company in the second quarter of this year. We hope to have a system ready for the market by late 2025.” 

“The Enterprise Ireland Commercialisation Fund has been a lifesaver,” says Hussain. “They gave us the funding to start developing the product. That was the first time we saw the system with our own eyes. It was only theory before that.”

How the ‘hottest startup in Ireland’ is helping to combat the climate crisis

David Igoe, assistant professor in Trinity’s School of Engineering, will use a newly secured Sustainable Energy Authority of Ireland (SEAI) grant of about €250,000 to support research into the effects of pile ageing for offshore wind foundation design. 

Dr Igoe hopes the project will deliver new insights that will help to significantly reduce the costs associated with the design of the foundation structures, where there are large gains to be made.  

The award is funded through the SEAI Research, Development and Demonstration Funding Programme 2023.  

Dr Igoe said: “For offshore wind turbines, the foundations can represent up to 30% of the overall costs and large savings can be achieved with more efficient design. This project will tackle pile ageing, the phenomenon where the foundation capacity increases significantly over time. Pile ageing is typically overlooked in offshore foundation design due to a poor understanding of the mechanisms controlling the rate of ageing.” 

Developing new insights into the physical processes of pile ageing can result in significant cost savings for the industry. 

Dr Igoe added: “The project aims to systematically test the factors influencing the ageing in offshore piles through model-scale testing using novel laboratory equipment, and also field-scale testing of aged piles up to a year to validate the model-scale tests.” 

Project focuses on cutting cost of offshore wind turbines

At first glance, the wind-turbine tower that rises from the green landscape in the Swedish municipality of Skara looks like any other. It reaches a height of 105 metres and, at the top, supports a familiar trio of big rotating blades. 

But unlike most wind-turbine towers, which are made of steel, this one is wooden. It represents the first commercial installation by Swedish engineering company Modvion – and it could point to the future of wind energy. 

 

Towering wood

When it comes to renewable energy, wood can make wind power even greener by serving as the material for the towers. 

What’s more, wood can help wind turbines to become cheaper and more powerful, providing an economic incentive on top of the environmental one, according to Modvion chief executive officer Otto Lundman.

"Wooden turbine towers are lighter, more modular and can be built taller than steel towers," says Lundman.

Modvion received EU funding to advance the goal of high-altitude wind turbines with wooden towers. The project ran from October 2020 through September 2023. 

The tower of the Skara turbine emerged from the project and is made of laminated wood from Modvion’s factory in Gothenburg located about 130km to the southwest. 

It took about a year to build and entered into operation for Swedish power company Varberg Energi in February 2024. Denmark-based Vestas supplied the turbine. 

"Building and designing towers like this requires large investments," says Lundman. "EU funding was instrumental in allowing us to develop this technology."

Going for growth

Wind energy has grown rapidly across Europe in recent years and in 2022 met 16% of the EU’s electricity needs. Wind also accounted for 37% of the electricity generated from renewable sources in the EU in 2021. 

record 17 gigawatts of wind energy was built in Europe in 2023, according to industry association WindEurope.

 
'The higher you go, the more wind you can get.' Otto Lundman, Modvion

 

Nonetheless, wind power must expand further for the EU to meet goals of cutting greenhouse-gas emissions by 55% in 2030 compared with 1990 levels and increasing the market share of renewables to 42.5% at the end of the decade from about 23% now.

To help achieve those targets, 30 gigawatts of wind turbines need to be built every year between now and 2030.

The thinking in some industry circles is that new designs able to boost profitability are needed, driving scientific efforts.

"The wind energy sector has done a great job of incrementally decreasing the cost of energy in recent decades," says Dr James Carroll, an associate professor at the University of Strathclyde in the UK. "But cost improvements in traditional turbines have been slowing down. That’s why we need to look for more radical improvements."

Count the gains

That’s where Modvion’s wooden wind-turbine tower offers promise – for three notable economic reasons.

One has to do with strength. The laminated veneer lumber used by Modvion is 55% stronger per weight than the steel traditionally used in wind turbine towers, according to the company.

Modvion calls its engineered wood 'nature’s carbon fibre'.

Another reason for optimism is weight. A wooden tower is a third lighter than a comparable steel one and, as a result, is easier to transport.

Then there is height. With the strength and transport advantages of wood, Modvion wants to build taller towers. "The higher you go, the more wind you can get," says Lundman.

Broader bases

To understand the technical challenge with towers, consider that they are built like an upside-down cone: broader below and narrower on top. The taller the tower, the broader the base needs to be. 

Traditionally, this is achieved by stacking steel cylinders onto each other. But above a certain tower height it becomes virtually impossible to transport the base cylinders over roads because of their size and weight. 

By contrast, a wooden construction uses C-shaped panels, which are glued together to form a cylinder. This makes the construction more modular and the shipping of parts much easier – a bit like IKEA for wind turbine towers. 

Using similar, modular steel structures would be inefficient because they would have to be bolted together, greatly increasing costs, according to Lundman.

Climate relief

Beyond the economic advantages of wood are the environmental ones. 

Wood is better for the climate than steel. Steel production is energy-intensive and involves the burning of fossil fuels that emit greenhouse gases. 

"By switching from a steel to a wooden tower, you reduce the emissions from producing the tower by 90%," says Lundman.

Because forests are important storers of carbon, Modvion sources its wood from sustainably managed ones in Scandinavia. The company’s towers can also be recycled after decommissioning, offering another green gain.

Following the EU funding, Modvion’s priority is to scale up production.

"Producing wood towers like this hasn’t been done before at an industrial scale," says Lundman. "We, for example, needed to make the lamination machines ourselves. They simply didn’t exist for our purpose in these sizes."

He says Modvion aims to have a larger volume factory up and running by 2027. The objective is to supply 10% of the global wind-energy market within a decade. 

Turbine test

Work on the next generation of wind-energy equipment involves not just the towers but also the turbines.

 
'It’s a radical new idea, but that’s what makes the research so fun.' Professor William Leithead, XROTOR

 

Another EU-funded project has reimagined what a wind turbine might look like and how it would operate. 

Called XROTOR, the project has examined the feasibility of a vertical-axis turbine combined with horizontal-axis secondary rotors instead of just the conventional horizontal axis. A vertical-axis turbine rotates around its tower. 

"The idea goes back more than 10 years," says William Leithead, a professor of systems and control at the University of Strathclyde. "I saw that vertical-axis wind turbines without secondary rotors just couldn’t work in an economically efficient way and started thinking about a solution."

Leithead and Carroll lead XROTOR, which is due to end in April 2024 after three years and four months.

While vertical-axis turbines can be placed closer together, they have a big disadvantage: their blades turn more slowly. That increases the turbine drive, train size and cost for the given energy generated, weakening the economic case for such a design. 

"Fundamentally, they are too costly for the energy they generate," says Prof Leithead.

X-shaped rotor

In response, the XROTOR researchers adapted the concept. They designed a vertical-axis turbine with an X-shaped primary rotor that has smaller, horizontal-axis turbines at the tips. 

The secondary rotors rotate very fast and generate the energy of the turbine. This design could combine the advantages of both vertical-axis and horizontal-axis turbines. 

"You can place these turbines closer together offshore," says Prof Leithead. "Conventional turbines produce a wind wake, which means you can’t put them too close together or their performance will be affected."

At present, wind farms are being pushed farther out to sea to find unfilled areas. That increases costs because turbines need to be more resistant to extreme weather and more cables need to be laid. 

If turbines could be placed closer together, more electricity could be produced nearer to shore.

"The impact of this could be huge," says Prof Leithead. "We’re looking here at a cost saving of 20% compared to similar size horizontal-axis turbines."

While it has gone through simulations, the new concept has yet to be built and tested in a real-life setting, so the potential benefits still need to be proven.

Prof Leithead and his colleagues are preparing to share the XROTOR results and to seek follow-up financing from private and public investors.

"It will take at least four years and probably more before we will see this concept in the real world," says Prof Leithead. "It’s a radical new idea, but that’s what makes the research so fun." 

Author: Tom Cassauwers. This article first appeared in Horizon magazine.

How new materials and designs are making wind power's towers and turbines greener and cheaper

Imagine heating your home from the ceiling, not from underfloor heating or radiators. Once installed like wallpaper, high-tech infrared fabric emits heat in a similar way to the sun’s rays. This could be a logical way to add low-carbon heat into existing homes that need retrofitting to improve energy efficiency.

Under the currently proposed UK legislative changes, no new home will be built with an incoming gas supply after 2025. If you are buying a new home that has been designed and built to the new Future Homes Standard, you have got little to worry about.

But for older properties, retrofitting projects can be complex, inconvenient and expensive. As gas boilers are phased out, heat pumps are usually the preferred alternative for energy-efficient housing. However, infrared fabric technology could be much better suited as a low-carbon heating solution for Britain's existing housing stock, and here’s why.

1) Instant heat

Unlike heat pumps, which are a slow response heating system, infrared fabric emits radiant heat that can be felt within minutes. That has multiple advantages.

Gas boilers heat up our rooms quickly, so we don’t have to leave the heating on when we’re out, but heat pumps don’t work like that. Instead, they deliver a continuous low level of heat, so homes need to be well insulated to retain that heat and airtight to stop draughts. But, without draughts, we will need a mechanical ventilation system to circulate fresh air.

Instant radiant heat reduces the need for all these additional interventions by directly heating the people and surfaces in a room rather than the air itself. It can be turned on or boosted to higher temperatures by motion sensors when you enter a room, with instant results. That means you only need to heat the rooms that you are in, rather than an entire house.

2) Simple to install

Infrared fabric looks like a roll of slightly stiff wallpaper. It is essentially a graphene sandwich, a thin film of carbon between two sheets of paper that conducts low voltage electricity and emits infrared heat, like the sun, but without the light or harmful ultraviolet.

A room’s ceiling area emits the right amount of heat for a room, making installation very simple in any property, irrespective of its construction, shape or size. It is little more than a wallpapering job with a click-together wiring connection. Your gas boiler could even be left in place for emergencies alongside it. By comparison, heat pump installation requires extensive additional works and sometimes a period of relocation.

3) Affordable heat

Infrared fabric is affordable to install and maintain due to its simplicity with a total cost of about £100 per sq metre for a full system. And it is quite indestructible – it can have holes cut out of it and can get wet in floods without any danger to occupants or damage to the material. It is also affordable to run.

Heat pumps are known to generate more energy than they use, up to three times as much, by taking low grade heat out of the air and compressing it. Infrared fabric cannot match that, but because radiant heat is instant, it is only being emitted when needed in the rooms that you are in, so even allowing for a hot water system the total energy use can be up to 20% less than from a heat pump.

4) Radiant heat is healthy and safe

Once the infrared heat warms the people, objects and surfaces that it touches, they in turn give off secondary heat through the process of convection. But the overall temperature is perceived to be 3˚C warmer than it actually is because people are being heated, as opposed to the air.

That is both healthier and cheaper to sustain. Radiant heat also means the air carries fewer allergens due to reduced air movement – it is the convection currents from traditional heating systems that stir up the dust and allergens.

Infrared panels do the same thing but from a 90˚C point source in your room and with less consistency. Radiators reach 60-70˚C, whereas infrared fabric emits a low-level heat (45˚C) over the whole area. Heat absorbed into the fabric of the building is retained for longer than warmed air, resulting in a more consistent room temperature across day and night.

5) Our home-grown future

Infrared fabric is a UK invention and it is UK-manufactured. All we need now is for it to be UK accredited. That is a long and expensive process, but the all-important SAP Appendix Q certification is due in 2025 if not before. It already has BSEN (British Standard) approval as a large area low temperature emitter and it is class A fire rated.

The Welsh government already funds its use in retrofit programmes following extensive trials across 270 homes. Further research is now needed to evidence the health, safety and carbon benefits that will strengthen the case even more for this form of heating.

So if you are retrofitting an existing property as a home owner, private landlord, housing association or local authority, infrared fabric could be a low-risk, low-cost, low-carbon solution worth considering. 

Author: , lecturer in architecture, School of Architecture, Design and Built Environment, Nottingham Trent University. This article first appeared in the Conversation.

Here are five reasons why people should heat their home using infrared fabric

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