Abbonati

Integrated Energy System in Ferrara

Geothermal and waste energy sources

© Comune di Ferrara

© Comune di Ferrara

Ferrara, City of the Renaissance, and its Po Delta, with an area of 46,712 ha, was inscribed on the World Heritage List in 1995. The humanist concept of the ‘ideal city’ came to life here in the neighbourhoods built from 1492 onwards by Biagio Rossetti according to the new principles of perspective. The completion of this project marked the birth of modern town planning and influenced its subsequent development. Today Ferrara continues in this creative spirit in such fields as energy.

Ferrara is one of the most sustainable cities of Italy and environmental issues are seriously taken into account by the Municipality. It subscribed the Aalborg chart in 1996 e in 1998 ha iniziato l'Agenda Locale 21 processo. It has also been awarded by Legambiente (l'agenzia ambientale italiano) come migliore città ecologica in 2001. The municipality is member of several Italian and European networks of sustainable cities (ICLEI, BigNet, and Car Free Cities) and is signatory of EU’s Covenant of Mayors.

The Geothermal Project

© HERA. District Heating Pumps.

© HERA. District Heating Pumps.

The use of geothermal energy as energy source starts with its discovery in 1956, during explorations for oil reservoirs at a depth of 1,000 m, 4 km NW dal centro della città di Ferrara. At that time the well was abandoned and only after the energy crisis of the 70’s it was taken again into account, to utilize this important energy source.

Recent geo-structural and geothermal investigations carried out by HERA Group (Energy Resources Environment Holdings) in collaboration with the University of Ferrara and the Emilia-Romagna Region, confirm the presence of geothermal reservoirs in the east part of Ferrara. Three hydrothermal systems have been identified. Each reservoir can be considered hydraulically separated from the others by aquitards that prevent significant leakages.

At the beginning of the 80’s, the Municipality of Ferrara developed a Geothermal Project in order to exploit this resource as a primary source for an urban heating system and to reduce, in a solid way, the environmental impact created by the traditional energy sources (coke, oil and methane gas, etc…).

In un primo momento, il fluido geotermico (acqua calda, ca 100°C) è pompata da una profondità di 1,000 m alla superficie; poi l'acqua calda trasferisce energia termica al sistema di riscaldamento. Infine, viene reintrodotta nel sottosuolo, al fine di garantire la stabilità geotecnica.

I lavori iniziarono nel 1987 e in 1990 i primi edifici sono stati collegati alla rete di teleriscaldamento. In 1993 l'impianto di cogenerazione per la termodistruzione di rifiuti solidi è stata costruita, mentre un secondo pozzo è stato aperto nel 1995. In 1999 un alternatore turbo alimentato con il vapore generata dall'impianto CHP è stato installato. At the end of 2010 the installed geothermal power was about 23 MWt.

Sistema energetico integrato

© HERA. Renewable Energy Hub.

© HERA. Renewable Energy Hub.

Ora, la rete di Ferrara è alimentata con il cosiddetto "sistema energetico integrato", because the energy from the Waste Treatment Plant was added to the geothermal source. Questo sistema ha più benefici ambientali ed economici rispetto a quello tradizionale, perché permette di avere un notevole risparmio economico e di ridurre le emissioni di CO2.

The system incorporates geothermal sources, CHP (combined heat and power) units installed in the solid waste processing plants, together with boilers running on biogas and used as backup systems. The urban heating network supplies the equivalent of 22,000 housing units, mostly in private and public buildings.

But the future is more promising. The proposed new Renewable Energy Hub will allow increasing this figure to 37,000 housing units, meaning that the district heating would cover the 40% of households. Another new development is that solar thermal will be incorporated to geothermal, with the capacity to convert solar energy into thermal energy for heating with a power of 1 MWt.

The energy mix will reach 90% of renewables. With the new Hub, 56.4% of the energy in the grid will come from geothermal sources, 34.3% from the Cassana incinerator, exploiting energy from waste and agricultural biomass, 0.3% from solar thermal, and only 9% from natural gas, the only non-renewable source.

Lessons learned and replicability

The District Heating System of Ferrara represents one of the most important examples of ‘Integrated Energy System’ that will be further increased by the future development. Grazie alla sua elevata efficienza energetica questo sistema è pensato per essere altamente consigliabile e trasferibili anche se alcuni problema può essere correlato alla dimensione necessaria costruzione, connesse al mercato, e ragioni economiche e tecniche.

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RENFORUS Mappa Interattiva

Contatti

Dr Osman Benchikh *. Specialista programma in carica di energia e le energie rinnovabili. Coordinatore del progetto RENFORUS.
E-mail: o.benchikh(a)unesco.org
Cipriano Marín **. Assistente di progetto di implementazione RENFORUS.
E-mail: c.marin(a)unescocan.org
Indirizzi: * UNESCO. 1, Rue Miollis. 75015 Paris – France
** Ave. Isole Canarie, 35 - 38007, S / C Tenerife - Spagna