The Borneo Post

Vast Vienna wastewater heat pumps showcase EU climate drive

- Julia Zappei

In a large hall on the outskirts of Vienna, shiny pipes carry treated wastewater through three giant heat pumps, part of Austria’s drive to reduce carbon emissions and its dependence on Russian gas, with more and more European cities eyeing this alternativ­e.

The plant – billed as Europe’s most powerful one – is churning out district heat to up to 56,000 Vienna households, with operator Wien Energie planning to double its capacity to 112,000 households by 2027.

“It is very clear that we have to restructur­e our energy system to become independen­t of fossil fuels or of different individual countries,” Wien Energie manager Linda Kirchberge­r told AFP.

Heat pumps work along the same principle as refrigerat­ors, only it is the heat that is sought and not the cold. Household heat pumps have been enjoying surging interest, but they can also be implemente­d on a larger scale for city heating systems.

Kirchberge­r said the plant was garnering a lot of interest from energy suppliers in other European cities, which are likewise in the process of installing pumps that extract the heat found in wastewater and use it to heat households.

Wastewater

The Vienna heat pumps – which are fed by electricit­y from a nearby hydropower plant – are next to a sewage treatment facility.

Since December, the steadily flowing stream of treated water from that facility is channelled through the pumps.

They extract six degrees Celsius (11 degrees Fahrenheit) of heat from it before it flows back out and into the Danube. The lower temperatur­e of water discharged into the river is an added advantage given the globe’s warming waters, according to expert Florian Kretschmer.

The extracted heat, in turn, is chanelled to Wien Energie customers in the form of hot water over a vast network of pipes for district heating, which with 1,300 kilometres is Europe’s third largest, according to the company.

“The technology itself (to extract heat) is nothing new... The interestin­g thing is that a new medium, a new energy source, is now being developed in the form of wastewater... which is always just below our feet in our cities,” said Kretschmer from Vienna’s University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU).

Especially in Scandinavi­an cities and neighbouri­ng Switzerlan­d, heat is already extracted from wastewater, and heat pumps using sewage water are springing up in more cities, such as in Germany’s Hamburg, he added.

In Vienna, initial plans for the heat pumps started four years ago with an investment of 70 million euros (US$76 million) for the current first phase.

Wien Energie supplies district heating to 440,000 households, just under half Vienna’s total.

Energy efficiency

Winning energy from the sewers got a push in the EU in 2018, according to Kretschmer, when the bloc recognised wastewater as a renewable source of energy.

“As the EU moves to execute on the pledge to double down on energy efficiency... substituti­ng inefficien­t fossil fuels with electrifie­d solutions like heat pumps will be crucial,” Lars Nitter Havro, a senior analyst at Rystad Energy, told AFP.

About half of all households in the EU are still heated using fossil fuels, he added.

Russia had long been the EU’s top gas supplier, but since Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, which sent energy prices skyrocketi­ng, Europe is looking to diversify.

Landlocked Austria still continues to be heavily dependent on Russian gas. But projects such as the Vienna heat pumps are trying to offer alternativ­es.

“The goal will always be that we are truly independen­t, offering Viennese a secure supply, but also price stability,” Kirchberge­r of Wien Energie said, in front on the pumps silently working in the background.

 ?? ?? Kirchberge­r poses inside the plant of Wien Energie outside Vienna, Austria, billed as Europe’s most powerful heat pump carrying treated wastewater, and part of Austria’s drive to reduce carbon emissions and its dependence on Russian gas.
Kirchberge­r poses inside the plant of Wien Energie outside Vienna, Austria, billed as Europe’s most powerful heat pump carrying treated wastewater, and part of Austria’s drive to reduce carbon emissions and its dependence on Russian gas.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? Photo shows purified wastewater from the treatment plant inside a basin before it is transferre­d to the heat pump plant run by energy company Wien Energie in the Simmering district of Vienna, Austria.
— AFP photo Photo shows purified wastewater from the treatment plant inside a basin before it is transferre­d to the heat pump plant run by energy company Wien Energie in the Simmering district of Vienna, Austria.

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