Combustion Solutions launches a District Heating installation in Serbia
Integral Combustion Solutions (Soluciones Integrales de Combustion) has completed the commissioning and start-up of a District Heating in Serbia, a centralized heating network in the town of Kladovo, with the collaboration of a local engineering company.
Urban Distric Heating in Serbia
Integral Combustion Solutions is a provider of global turnkey solutions in the field of engineering, and supply and maintenance for the energy sector. In this plant it has installed and commissioned an E & M Combustion´s fuel burner model 8,500 GLO, with mixed combustion of gas-fuel in this installation
The District Heating system in Serbia will be used to provide heat to an extensive area of the Kladovo town. The company has installed this equipment in collaboration with local engineering company Termotim.
How does District Heating networks operate
Through a district heating network, the heat producing plant produce heated supply water to consumers where it is used as a network for building heating and also to generate domestic hot water.
The supply water might be used directly for heating. Alternatively, a heat exchanger could also transfer the heat to an internal circulation and the supply water then returns to the district heating plant, because the district heating supply water circulates endlessly in a closed pipeline.
District heating is considered as an ecological and energy efficient heating source due to the simultaneous production of heat and electricity in comibine heat an power plants. Also, District heating is considered as an ecological and energy efficient heating source due to the simultaneous production of heat and electricity in comibine heat an power plants. Also, avoiding the heat losts and by implementing renewable energy sources and using waste heat coming from industry, the better environmental gain is evident.
District heating network systems are also compatible with mixed renewable energy sources such as hydrogen, biofuels and biomass, using existing pipes or modifying them to make them safer.
- On 13/01/2019