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When Chemical Plants Heat Homes: Industrial Waste Heat Becomes a Source of Energy

Henkel and Evonik demonstrate how process heat can become a key component of the heating transition

Exclusively for K-Mag

An industrial plant illuminated at night

Industrial plants generate large amounts of waste heat during production processes, which could be used for district heating networks.

03.06.2026

Industrial Waste Heat Is Converted into Heating Energy

Schematic showing the use of industrial waste heat for district heating and domestic use; Source: AI-generated via Google Gemini

How it works:

Henkel: Industrial Waste Heat for the District Heating Network

Two men wearing hard hats at an industrial facility at the Henkel site in Düsseldorf; Copyright: Daniel Koke

Henkel and Stadtwerke Düsseldorf are using industrial waste heat to supply district heating to the south of Düsseldorf. Copyright: Daniel Koke

Evonik: Heat Pump Makes Use of Low-Temperature Waste Heat

High-temperature heat pump at the Evonik site in Herne; Copyright: Evonik

The high-temperature heat pump at the Evonik site in Herne makes industrial low-temperature waste heat usable for district heating. Copyright: Evonik

Benefits of Using Industrial Waste Heat for Heating

Portrait Salvatore Ardito

Salvatore Ardito, Head of Asset Management and Project Development for Generation, and Overall Project Manager for the heating partnership between Stadtwerke Düsseldorf and Henkel

Why isn't industrial waste heat used on a widespread basis for heating?

Industry as Part of the Heat Transition

The portrait was generated by AI.

Author: Elena Blume | K-Mag

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