Deep geothermal energy has tremendous potential for decarbonizing the heating sector. However, one common
obstacle can be the mismatch between geologically attractive regions in the countryside and urban areas
with a high heat demand density, which are therefore attractive for district heating systems. In the last years,
an increasing number of regions consider the transport of geothermal heat into urban clusters. One example
of such a region is the South German Molasse Basin in Upper Bavaria. However, such heat transport pipelines
come along with massive upfront investment costs due to the required large pipe diameter and insulation
thickness. While the classic concept foresees the use of water as a heat carrier in such long-distance heat
transportation pipelines, CO2 can be an attractive alternative. This study investigates the thermo-economic
performance of CO2 as a heat transport carrier for a potential long-distance heat transmission pipeline with a
length of 20 km, which could connect a planned geothermal project in the South of Munich with the existing
district heating network of Munich. The results of the base case scenario demonstrate that for both heat carrier
options water and CO2 rather low LCOH for the transport of the heat can be achieved. The resulting additional
LCOH by the long-distance heat transport of around 0.6 cC/kWh are rather small compared to the typical overall
LCOH of geothermal district heating systems. Comparing the thermo-economic performance of water and
CO2 reveals rather similar achievable LCOH, with a slight advantage for the classical concept of using water.
However, this changes if the installation of a high temperature heat pump (HTHP) is considered in order to increase
the thermal capacity of the heat transport system. In the case of using CO2, the additional temperature
increase takes place directly within the CO2 stream by just installing a compressor, while in the case of the
water system, a complete HTHP system needs to be installed. In combination with a higher achievable COP,
the CO2 HTHP configurations results in lower overall LCOH compared to the water system
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Deep geothermal energy has tremendous potential for decarbonizing the heating sector. However, one common
obstacle can be the mismatch between geologically attractive regions in the countryside and urban areas
with a high heat demand density, which are therefore attractive for district heating systems. In the last years,
an increasing number of regions consider the transport of geothermal heat into urban clusters. One example
of such a region is the South German Molasse Basin in Upper Bavari...
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