Energies, Vol. 18, Pages 6237: Hydrogen-Based Decarbonisation Strategies for Residential Heating: An Energy Efficiency and Conservation Analysis in the North of Tyne Region

Energies, Vol. 18, Pages 6237: Hydrogen-Based Decarbonisation Strategies for Residential Heating: An Energy Efficiency and Conservation Analysis in the North of Tyne Region

Energies doi: 10.3390/en18236237

Authors:
Mohamed Abuella
Adib Allahham
Nabila Ahmed Rufa’I
Sara Louise Walker

This study examines hydrogen-based and alternative strategies for decarbonising residential heating in the North of Tyne (NoT) region, UK, focusing on energy efficiency and conservation. A multi-system-perspective framework integrating scenario analysis and quantitative energy-system modelling is applied to assess socio-technical interventions, technology pathways (heat pumps and hydrogen boilers), and hydrogen-blending levels up to 2050. Monte Carlo simulations and a game-theoretic investment model are used to evaluate energy demand, CO2 emissions, and system costs. The results show that socio-technical interventions substantially reduce energy demand but are insufficient alone to reach net zero. Hydrogen blending provides modest emission reductions, while full electrification via heat pumps is most cost-effective in the long term, particularly with carbon capture and storage (CCS). A hybrid 50/50 heat pump–hydrogen-boiler pathway with CCS post-2040 presents a practical transition option. The findings highlight the importance of coordinated infrastructure planning and societal engagement for achieving deep heating decarbonisation.

More From Author

Energies, Vol. 18, Pages 6239: Corrosion Resistance of Well Steel in a Supercritical Carbon Dioxide Environment in Geothermal Systems Utilizing Depleted Hydrocarbon Reservoirs

Energies, Vol. 18, Pages 6238: Spatial Influence on Waste-to-Energy Sustainability: A Life Cycle Assessment of RDF Transport and Plant Siting

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *