Investing for the future
One of the things you hope for when ripping out your gas boiler and putting in a heat pump is things are not going to be worse for you.
Obviously, having our own solar generation capability means that unlike distilling our own natural gas, we can generate our own electricity. So, if it’s sunny and cold on a winter’s day, all should be good.
But, let’s be honest here, I live on a small island in the atlantic ocean, which is much closer to the arctic pole than the equator. During the winter, our shortest day is on the 21st or 22nd December and is 7 hours and 50 minutes. The sun is not necessarily going to be putting in an appearance, and is certainly not something you can bet on.
But in December 2024, I am looking out of my window and seeing a shining sun – more importantly, my solar cells are not only heating my house right this moment, but also charging my home battery.
This is kind of important because it means we can heat the house later today, after the sun sets which some stowed energy.
Which is hard to do with a gas boiler.
Interestingly, this year we still have all the figures for our gas heating. I know this because that’s all we were doing with the gas: heating the house and our water. Our heat pump provides similar figures in a handy app.
This very day in December 2023, we used 73kWh to heat the house and water. This year we’ve used 12.2kWh.
Now, it could be a much warmer day in our home town. So, last year the temperature varied between 4°C and 11°C. Not that dissimilar, our range today is 4 °C and 8°C (we’re a little colder today) . We haven’t changed our thermostats or settings, all we’ve done is switch the source of the heat… In fact, the past couple of days, we’ve turned down the thermostat in our bedroom because it was way too warm for us given how we had things setup.
Of course, that benefit could be happening right now!
Yawn, so?
Consider this, at the moment, right now, every 1kWh of electricity costs £0.24. Every stored unit we can make use of means we are not using electricity that has been generated by burning gas. You can see that in 10 minutes, we went from discharging the battery to feeding in excess today – the thermostats in the radiators and rooms turned off the draw from the heat pump, thus reducing our need for electricity and allowing us to charge the battery.
Now, because of the efficencies, an electric heat pump out performs a gas boiler, so environmentally it is a sounder choice. But we get the benefit of this right here right now, unlike our V2G. We’re hoping that during the summer, we can be completely off grid…
But haven’t you spent an awful lot of money to get to this point? The photovoltaics, heat pump, battery, smart thermostats…
Yes, we have invested to do this. Not all in one go, we did the solar cells in August 2014. The battery in November this year, and the heat pump was in July. The smart heating was over six months in 2021.
But this investment is giving us a big return thanks to high inflation. The solar cells paid for themselves in 5 years (and that was before electricity was £0.24 a unit).
In the next 20 years, we’ll both be retired, but it will cost a small fraction of our pensions to keep warm and have hot food during the winter. All thanks to having made the investment now.
Isn’t that what it’s all about? Saving the future…
Posted: December 15th, 2024 under Driving off the grid.
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