Bring clean heating and cooling to buildings: a circular energy economy in urban environments - European Commission
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European Sustainable Energy Week
  • News blog
  • 27 February 2025
  • European Climate, Infrastructure and Environment Executive Agency
  • 4 min read

Bring clean heating and cooling to buildings: a circular energy economy in urban environments

By Thomas Nowak - exploring how recovering and recycling waste heat through thermal networks, heat pumps, and renewable energy can create a circular energy economy in urban areas.

Thomas Nowak

Efficient heating and cooling is essential, yet much thermal energy goes to waste. What if we could avoid this thermal pollution and instead establish a circular energy economy in urban areas by recovering and recycling waste heat? Thermal networks as heat collectors and transport means, heat pumps as energy lifts, storage and clean renewable energy sources can turn this dream into reality today.

Clean heating and cooling in cities is not happening 

As the climate crisis worsens and urban populations grow, cities face increasing pressure to improve infrastructure and services. Cities need to be made more resilient against extreme weather incidents and heat waves. The use of fossil energy must be replaced by clean alternatives. This is not only a response to climate change, but also an obligation codified in EU law, notably the EU Energy performance of buildings and the Renewable Energy Directives.  

The symbiosis of heat pumps, low temperature energy grids and the use of renewable electricity/heat provides a solution.  

Low temperature thermal networks to unlock “the energy chest” of cities  

Traditional district heating and cooling distributes high temperature thermal energy generated in central plants to its clients. Even using insulated pipes, some energy is lost in the distribution. Changing from central to decentralised networks and reducing operating temperature avoids this disadvantage. Low temperature, multi-input-output networks connect all types of buildings requiring heating and cooling. They collect waste heat from many different sources (e.g. industrial processes, offices, data centres, or public infrastructure) and distribute it where it is needed.  Heat pumps raise the temperature to the required level at the point of demand.   

Heat pumps for clean thermal energy 

Heat pumps extract heat from a source (air, water, ground or a thermal network), lifting it to a higher temperature level to provide heating. At the same time the source is slightly cooled. Heat pumps always provide useful heating and cooling and it depends on the system design which of these services can be used.  

Connecting the many energy users and (waste) heat providers in a city through a thermal network and adding heat pumps of different types and capacities in apartments and buildings (see circles) enables the collection of waste heat and highest heating and cooling efficiency. One user's waste heat becomes another users heat source (see figure 1).  

Nowak
Figure 1: The symbiosis of heat pumps, thermal energy grids and multiple energy sources for clean heating and cooling of apartments and buildings in cities. Source: Qvantum Industries
© Qvantum Industries AB

Multiple benefits for cities 

The benefits for cities of transforming their heating and cooling infrastructure are plentiful. 

  • Replacing fossil fuels with clean energy reduces CO₂ emissions and air pollution, leading to better air quality.  
  • Collecting waste heat from cooling limits the heat island effect in cities. Buildings equipped with cooling help citizens withstand heat waves. Cities and citizens are more resilient to already observable climate change.  
  • Storage tanks and the energy grid itself operate as thermal battery, balancing the electric grid.  
  • Local energy sources, used by European technology solutions and designed and installed by a European workforce, help Europe become largely independent of fossil energy.   

Breaking barriers to adoption 

Implementing heat pump technology and thermal networks faces challenges. Upfront investment costs, regulatory hurdles, and limited public awareness can slow progress. Cities and policymakers should incentivise modern heat pump-based heating and cooling by making deployment easy and economically attractive. Cities should make thermal networks part of their public waste heat collection infrastructure.  

Convincing humans is also key. Campaigns explaining policy, highlighting the benefits of clean heating and cooling and explaining how end users will be supported in their decision making will create trust and accelerate adoption by decision makers.  

A path to sustainable cities 

Urban heating can become decarbonised, efficient and sustainable while creating cleaner, more affordable, and more resilient communities. The technology exists, its potential is enormous. Let’s make use of it. Clean heating and cooling is not just a choice – it is the cornerstone of Europe’s energy and climate policy. 

Recommended links  

  1. Assessing the potential of energy sharing through a shallow geothermal heating and cooling network
  2. Using networked heat pumps for sustainable heating and cooling
  3. Energy Performance of Buildings Directive
  4. The Heat Geek – Happier With A Heat Pump and Why Hydrogen is Dead! The fully charged show episode with Adam Chapman

About the author  

Thomas is a long-term (renewable) energy aficionado. Apart from closely following the energy transition both in the electricity and heating sectors, he is the owner of a heat pump, a PV power plant and a building in which both peacefully cooperate. 

Currently, Thomas represents the Swedish scale-up Qvantum Industries as vice president government relations and public affairs aiming to position heat pumps as a viable solution for single and multi-family buildings.  

Before his current position Thomas was leading the European Heat Pump Association as Secretary General, and he is a member of its board today.   

Disclaimer: This article is a contribution from a partner. All rights reserved.

Neither the European Commission nor any person acting on behalf of the Commission is responsible for the use that might be made of the information in the article. The opinions expressed are those of the author(s) only and should not be considered as representative of the European Commission’s official position.

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