Skip to content
VuFind
  • 0 Items in e-Shelf (Full)
  • History
  • User Account
  • Logout
  • User Account
  • Help
    • English
    • Deutsch
  • Books & more
  • Articles & more
  • JuSER
Advanced
 
  • Literature Request
  • Cite this
  • Email this
  • Export
    • Export to RefWorks
    • Export to EndNoteWeb
    • Export to EndNote
    • Export to MARC
    • Export to MARCXML
    • Export to BibTeX
  • Favorites
  • Add to e-Shelf Remove from e-Shelf


QR Code
This title appears in the Scientific Report : 2022 

Paths towards greenhouse gas neutrality of transport sector

Paths towards greenhouse gas neutrality of transport sector

Pathways towards greenhouse gas neutrality in the transport sectorPfade zur Treibhausgasneutralität des VerkehrssektorsStefan Kraus,a,b Julian Reul,a,b Thomas Grube,a Jochen Linßena and Detlef Stoltena,ba Institute for Techno-Economic Systems Analysis (IEK-3), Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH, D-52425...

More

Saved in:
Personal Name(s): Kraus, Stefan (Corresponding author)
Reul, Julian / Grube, Thomas / Linssen, Jochen / Stolten, Detlef
Contributing Institute: Technoökonomische Systemanalyse; IEK-3
Imprint: 2022
Conference: 31st Aachen Colloquium, Aachen (Germany), 2022-10-10 - 2022-10-12
Document Type: Abstract
Research Program: Societally Feasible Transformation Pathways
Effective System Transformation Pathways
Publikationsportal JuSER

  • Description
  • Staff View

Pathways towards greenhouse gas neutrality in the transport sectorPfade zur Treibhausgasneutralität des VerkehrssektorsStefan Kraus,a,b Julian Reul,a,b Thomas Grube,a Jochen Linßena and Detlef Stoltena,ba Institute for Techno-Economic Systems Analysis (IEK-3), Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH, D-52425 Jülichb Chair for Fuel Cells, RWTH Aachen University, c/o Institute of Electrochemical Process Engineering, Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH D-52425 JülichAbstractAs a part of the energy system, the transport sector must achieve the national target of greenhouse gas neutrality by 2045. In the passenger car sector, the market ramp-up of electromobility is already in full swing. However, questions arise as to how the transport sector as a whole will be able to achieve the goal of greenhouse gas neutrality. Which drivetrains and fuels should be used in which means of transport, for instance? And where do these fuels originate from considering limited renewable energy resources, which could also serve to reduce greenhouse gases in other sectors? To answer these questions and go beyond results from simulation modeling that have been presented in the literature thus far, we present here cost optimal scenarios based on a newly-developed, Python based optimization model.Apart from robust findings pertaining to the comprehensive electrification of road transport, our results show that synthetic fuels are part of the cost-optimal solution during a transitional phase. This is due to the temporally-constrained transformation of road transport fleets in favor of fully electric vehicles, e.g. resulting from vehicle lifetime. Complementing the powertrain shift in vehicle stock, the resulting fuel demand shift will greatly affect the energy sector, in an example of so-called sector coupling. On the one hand, vehicle charging and hydrogen refueling networks must be expanded. On the other, alternative energy carriers are a mix of domestic production and imports. In this context, our results indicate that electricity generation is almost exclusively domestic, whereas synthetic fuels are fully imported. Hydrogen is both produced domestically and imported from other countries. Overall, the scenario results underscore the need for near-term action to achieve the goal of greenhouse gas neutrality in the transport sector by 2045.

  • Forschungszentrum Jülich
  • Central Library (ZB)
  • Powered by VuFind 6.1.1
Loading...