Energy transition: How is the energy transition impacting our cities and their hinterlands?

Accomplishing the energy transition is one of the great challenges of the 21st century.

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Our planet has plenty of renewable energy resources. Yet, the production requires much more space than producing energy from fossil fuels. Our research addresses the spatial challenges of renewable energy production on 4 different scales: The building, the neighbourhood, the city and regional scale.

The transition to renewable energy systems has to be carefully prepared and it will only happen incrementally. It has to be implemented undeterred by socio-economic uncertainties and in consideration of other, for example climate change related urban challenges.

Especially in places, where space is a limited resource, we need to think carefully about where and how the transition can be achieved and take into account the implications that souring of renewables has on a site, local practices, ecosystems, and livelihoods. By investigating these challenges through the building, the neighbourhood, the city and the region, our research offers a unique and spatially comprehensive study that allows us to recognise energy linkages across spaces and with that the complex spatial entanglements of the energy transition.

Building Scale

On the scale of the building, the energy transition implies a democratisation and decentralisation of energy generation and storage, including for example energy producing roofs and facades (BIPV), connected buildings and load sharing (microgrids), V2G and electric mobility, turning your house into a personal “power-bank”-station.

Through building integration, renewable energy generation also becomes visible in the city, which requires their careful design. New technologies, including active facades and learning-based control systems can turn fossil-fuel dependent cities into sustainable and self-regulating systems. Our research addresses holistic, multi-​scale and interdisciplinary approaches for assessing large scale deployment of BIPV taking into account different climatic, socio-​economic and urban conditions.

Neighbourhood Scale

In a high-density urban environment where land is scarce, renewable energy technologies, such as solar photovoltaics, compete with other important urban functions, such as greenery and farming. In order to create a sustainable and liveable urban environment, it is therefore crucial to utilise space most efficiently for the deployment of solar energy. We develop an optimization model that utilises smart energy management strategies to minimise the amount of space for photovoltaics installation within a larger building community. Those strategies include energy storage via electric and thermal storage battery, energy sharing via power microgrid and district cooling pipeline, and demand-side management via shifting energy demand from the peak hours to the off-peak hours. The computational results of a case study conducted in a building cluster in the campus of the National University of Singapore (NUS) indicate that those smart energy management strategies can potentially reduce the amount of space for solar photovoltaics by up to 28%. The saved space can be used for other urban functions such as greenery and farming.

City Scale

On the city scale, we need to have strategies in place that allow us to harness all available renewable energy potentials in accordance with existing and future urban functions including housing, industry and commercial areas and open space. Only in consideration of all available resources and their implications can we create planning guidelines that lead to socio-ecologically resilient cities and integrated and diversified energy systems. Our research addresses the renewable energy potentials in cities. We have created a comprehensive analysis of Singapore’s energy potentials and investigated possible implications of renewable energy deployment lifecycles to inform urban design decisions.

Our Energy Potential Maps for Singapore form the basis of new urban design guidelines that maximize the amount of locally sourced energy. These maps have been created in collaboration with the National University of Singapore (NUS).

Regional Scale

On a larger scale, renewable energy production currently contributes to a radical transformation of vast landscapes. In Southeast Asia (SEA), for example, solar and wind power as well as bioenergy produced from agricultural waste are operationalised in agriculturally dominant areas. These rapidly expanding practices restructure or replace agricultural businesses and supply chains that support subsistence farming. Our research addresses the various modes in which the energy transition is transforming large territories in SEA and devises ways in which it can take place while fostering sustainable, inclusive and equitable development.



Sustainable Development Goals

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Powering the City

The objective of this module is to efficiently reduce energy consumption and to increase solar energy production in cities while minimizing total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. The research includes the development of holistic, multi-scale and interdisciplinary approaches for assessing large scale deployment of (building integrated) photovoltaic in realistic urban contexts under different climatic, socio-economic and architectural conditions. Zurich and Singapore are used as complementary case studies and we are interacting with public stakeholders and agencies to directly apply research into practice by receiving feedback and providing training on toolboxes developed.
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Future Resilient Systems

The Future Resilient System programme develops a framework, concepts, and tools to make interconnected infrastructure systems more robust and resilient.
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Potential Agriterritories: Agrarian Questions under Planetary Urbanisation and Agroecological Transitions

Through analysis of several case studies in Europe and Asia, the project aims at a better understanding of processes of extended urbanisation in agricultural territories, exploring their characteristics, outlining potentials for agroecological transitions, and formulating concrete design strategies and governance models. The interdisciplinary module contains work packages covering the sustainable agroecological design and governance arrangements, novel soil ecologies, nature's contributions to people, and the impact of renewable energy extraction in agricultural territories.
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