Wastewater heats residential complex in Berlin

Climate-smart heat: In Germany Vattenfall uses wastewater to heat Berlin homes.

Grüne-Aue-area-in-Berlin-1920.jpg

In the Grüne Aue-area in Berlin, 113 homes at a total of 11,400 square meters are using waste water for heating.

Wastewater heat pumps are so far quite unusual in the housing industry. In the heating solution for the “Grüne Aue” residential area, Vattenfall’s Energy Solutions Germany has made use of this technology as part of a really climate smart combined plant. The heat from the wastewater covers around 20 percent of the overall heat demand of the residential area.

Christian Feuerherd, Head of Energy Solutions Germany, is proud of his team's performance: "In new buildings, we always deliver  high energy-efficient, decentralised heat from micro CHPs combined with boilers. But by integrating a wastewater heat pump we will now reduce the CO2 emissions by an additional 25 per cent or 22 tonnes of CO2 per year.” 

Heizung-mit-Abwasserpumpe-upscale.jpg

Wastewater pump (centre)

Extraordinary technology mix

The heat supply for the “Grüne Aue” district is provided by a combination of three different technologies. In addition to the wastewater heat pump, a combined heat and power unit (CHP) and a condensing boiler are used in the heating solution. The annual heat demand is 740 megawatt hours.

The heat pump uses the temperature of the wastewater to generate heat for the houses and thus contributes to the decarbonisation of the area. The electrical energy for the heat pump is covered by the micro CHP which generates heat and power in a combined process. The condensing boiler is only used to cover the heat demand at peak times.

boiler-room-1920.jpg

 View into the boiler room with the heat pump (front left in grey)

The heat is distributed via a local heating network with a length of one kilometre. The unique combined system is supplemented by remotely readable heat meters that enable fully automated metering.

The combined heating system is owned and operated by Vattenfall while the customer buys the produced heat.

See also

3D visualisation of CCS at Sleipner in Norway, copyright Equinor
Equinor

Norway’s Sleipner: Where CO2 has been buried in the rock since 1996

As the debate about carbon capture and storage (CCS) rages on elsewhere, carbon dioxide has been successfully stored deep below the North Sea outside the coast of Norway since 1996, in the w...

Read the full article

Vattenfall reviews HySkies project scope

Vattenfall and Shell are reviewing the scope for the HySkies electrofuel project with the ambition to find new partners to join Vattenfall.

Read the full article
Feets in shower. Photo by AdobeStock
AdobeStock

How using sewage for your shower helps the climate

We literally flush a huge part of produced energy right down the drain. But the hot sewage from you and your neighbours can be used to heat your shower water again - whilst also helping to a...

Read the full article