The city of Aarhus is undergoing its largest transformation of heat supply ever, as Studstrupværket will switch from burning wood chips to using electric heating of district water through heat pumps. The city council approved this change recently. The district heating will now be produced using renewable energy sources, according to Bjarne Munk Jensen, director of the municipal utility company Kredsløb. When electricity is cheap, Kredsløb can also store large amounts of hot water and save energy for times when both sun and wind fail. This transition will reduce CO2 emissions by 600,000 tons每年.
Bias read (Center): The article presents factual information about a policy decision regarding energy transition without overtly favoring any political stance. It focuses on technical details, environmental impact, and operational benefits without using biased language or selective sourcing.
Why these scores (Factual 95 · Objective 90): The article provides specific details about the transition from wood chips to renewable energy sources at Studstrupværket, including the reduction in CO2 emissions and the scale of energy production. These claims are internally consistent and align with the general consensus among similar reports. T



