Heat and cold store © Geothermie
Neubrandenburg GmbH
The energy generation and supply concept for the buildings of
the German Bundestag is intended to serve as a model for planners
and engineers. It provides an example of ecologically and
economically combinable machinery, installations and transmission
systems for energy generation and energy use.
- Conceptual specifications for the energy supply of the
new buildings of the German Bundestag
Among other things, the specifications for the renovation of the
Reichstag building for the purposes of the German Bundestag
included the demand for extensive use of renewable primary energy.
At the same time, an energy concept was drawn up for the Parliament
buildings in Berlin's Spreebogen district that put clear emphasis
on decentralised energy generation. Moreover, operation of the
plenary area was to be guaranteed even in the event of a
malfunction in an energy generation system.
- Machinery used to implement the energy
concept
In both the Reichstag building and the Paul Löbe building,
these specifications were realised by means of four diesel engines
that drive power generators. Since, in accordance with the
specifications of the energy concept, renewable primary energy was
to be used in the Bundestag buildings, the decision was taken to
use biodiesel as the fuel. To this end, standard engines were
installed, some components of which had to be converted by the
manufacturer to permit the use of biodiesel. The exhaust gas
emitted by the diesel engines is cleaned in a complex emission
control system - comprising particulate filters, reduction
catalysts and downstream oxidation catalysts - to such an extent
that the requirements specified in the German Technical
Instructions on Air Quality Control (TA Luft) are significantly
exceeded. The power generated in this way is supplemented by power
from Berlin's public supply network.
The heat from the engines and their emissions is sufficient for a
minimum supply of heat for the buildings of the German Bundestag.
To cover the heat requirement during the winter heating period,
four hot-water boilers are available that were designed for
peak-load supply and to act as a complete redundant system in the
event of engine failure. During the summer, the surplus heat
resulting from operation of the motor-driven cogeneration plants
can be used to drive three absorption cooling machines. If neither
heating nor cooling is needed in spring and autumn, the surplus
heat is pumped into a geothermal storage system, from where it can
be recovered as and when necessary.
A regenerative system utilising the groundwater is also used with
top priority for producing cold. However, five compression cooling
machines are available at distributed locations for peak-load cold
supply and as redundant systems.
- Use of renewable energies and ecological building
operation
In keeping with the high ecological standard targeted, great
importance is attached to the use of renewable primary energies.
- Biodiesel
All engines and the boiler in the Reichstag building run on
biodiesel (the correct term is FAME to DIN EN 14214). It is in
keeping with the ecological objectives of the German Bundestag that
the raw material is grown and processed in the close vicinity of
Berlin. So far, the only raw material available for use is rape,
from the seeds of which rape seed oil can be pressed. The biodiesel
is produced in a biodiesel factory by adding methanol. Glycerol is
produced at the same time, all of which is sold to customers in the
chemical industry.
Apart from traces of unavoidable pollutants, a major proportion of
the carbon dioxide generated by the combustion process of renewable
raw materials, e.g. rape, is absorbed again in the region.
Moreover, the use of agricultural produce also indirectly
contributes to preserving jobs in rural areas.
- Photovoltaics
A total of roughly 3,600 m² of photovoltaic elements with
different collector designs (some of which are heliotropic) are
installed on the roofs of the Reichstag building, the Paul
Löbe building and the Jakob Kaiser building. The equipment was
installed in the context of a demonstration programme of the
Federal Ministry of Building. The power generated by the
photovoltaic installations is fed entirely into the in-house
network.
- Heat generation and storage
Surplus heat that is generated in the motor-driven cogeneration
plants as a result of the combined generation of power and heat,
and which is not needed in the prevailing weather conditions,
either for heating in the buildings or for driving an absorption
cooling machine, is fed to an aquifer in front of the Reichstag
building via two boreholes reaching to a depth of roughly 300 m. To
this end, the water stored in the porous rock of this stratum is
pumped up through one borehole at its natural temperature of
approx. 20 °C, heated by the surplus heat via heat exchangers
in the basement of the Bundestag building, and pumped back down to
the same depth through the second borehole, some 280 m away. Water
with a maximum temperature of 60 °C is pressed into the rock at
a maximum pumping capacity of 100 m³/h and pumped back up
during the next heating period at temperatures starting in the
region of 55 °C. The feed temperature declines as removal
progresses, until economically viable tapping of the heat reaches
its limits at approx. 30 °C.
- Cold production and storage
The top priority in connection with cold production is to store
ambient cold in winter, which is dissipated into the groundwater
via heat exchangers. This process is concluded at the end of the
cold winter period, after which the cold water is tapped by
reversing the direction of flow at the start of early summer,
initially being drawn from the respective cold well at approx. 6
°C. Depending on demand, this temperature rises up to the
natural temperature of 11 °C in the course of the summer. If
the Bundestag buildings simultaneously require more cold than can
be taken from the cold storage wells, this cold is initially
generated by small, conventional cooling machines. If the demand
increases even further, and if prolonged demand is expected on the
basis of the summer temperatures, the three absorption cooling
machines are operated using the waste heat from the motor-driven
cogeneration plants.
- Technical equipment
It is part of the concept of ecologically oriented and need-based
generation of power, heat and cold that these types of energy are
used sparingly in the technical equipment of the buildings. For
example, ventilation systems equipped with fans requiring little
drive power were designed to this end. In many areas, the circuitry
is engineered to give priority to natural ventilation, rather than
air-conditioning by means of ventilation systems, if the indoor and
outdoor temperatures allow. In addition, passive and active
shading, together with thermal insulation of walls and windows,
makes a decisive contribution to reducing the input of outside heat
into the conference rooms and offices. Lighting is provided by
luminaires fitted with high-efficiency lamps, which are switched on
and off via a light management system as required.
- Optimised use of energies in the energy
network
Alongside the resource-conserving use of primary energies, the
need-oriented generation of user energies is also part of the
ecological concept. For example, there is the possibility of
generating heat, cold and power in different areas of the Bundestag
buildings and transporting them to other buildings in accordance
with requirements. There is a connecting network for 10 kV
electricity with transformers in each building for this purpose.
Similarly, the generated heat can be pumped in both directions
between the buildings at a temperature level of 110 °C. All
buildings participate in cold storage, and some can also transport
the cold water produced in the cooling machines to the neighbouring
building as and when needed. This energy network is controlled by a
master automation system that permits manual intervention.
As the Federal Chancellery also has a motor-driven cogeneration
plant, a connecting line to the heat store of the Bundestag energy
system has been installed in order to avoid the need for a separate
heat storage system. It can absorb surplus heat if needs be, and
also pass part of it back if necessary.
- Operating experience
Energy generating operations were constantly improved in the first
few years of operation. The cold store works highly satisfactorily
- in summer 2005, it did not even completely exhaust the ambient
cold stored in the preceding winter. Roughly 60% of the surplus
heat that resulted from operation of the motor-driven cogeneration
plants and was saved in the heat store could be recovered. A
research project was launched for scientific evaluation of the
operation of the cold and heat stores. Among other things, the
project is intended to reveal further potential for
optimisation.
- Transferability of the energy concept
The energy generation system described for the Bundestag buildings
would appear to be transferable to other buildings and consumers
only if similar consumption characteristics are present in terms of
the simultaneous demand for heat and power or cold and power. Also,
underground storage in front of the Reichstag building is only
possible because of the favourable geological conditions and can
therefore not be expected to work so efficiently at other locations
in Germany.
German Bundestag
Administration
Properties and Building Technology Division