‘Sector coupling’ could help decarbonise at lower cost
Electrification and sector coupling will be important components of the energy transition, if taxation is adjusted to create a level playing field
The practice of ‘sector coupling’ could create new dynamics, cut costs and reduce carbon emissions across multiple economic sectors. Sector coupling involves moving away from the siloed use of a particular energy carrier for a particular economic sector—such as oil for transport or natural gas for heating—and replacing it with a system where each sector can each utilise a variety of carriers. This should increase the efficiency of the energy system, but this shift will occur only if energy taxation is overhauled. Standards agency DNV GL argues that sector coupling would allow heavy industry, transport, households and services to procure power at more favourable costs. It sees coupling as an
Also in this section
12 November 2024
Standards have been agreed for a mechanism under Article 6.4 of the Paris Agreement to trade carbon credits internationally
8 November 2024
The energy sector will need all viable technologies to meet surging demand as AI and datacentres drain power grids
31 October 2024
Russia still aspires to become a major supplier of hydrogen, CO₂ storage capacity and carbon credits, despite financial constraints and the loss of Western technology and expertise
30 October 2024
Occidental subsidiary signs agreement with Enterprise Products Partners for pipelines and transport services for Bluebonnet hub