Peak Oil Events
Sat, Aug 7th, 2010, @10:00am
SCYTHING COURSE - A two day course
Sun, Aug 8th, 2010, @10:00am
SCYTHING COURSE - A two day course
Sat, Aug 14th, 2010, @10:00am
Fruit tree grafting - A one-day course
Main Menu
UK Peak Oil News
Our beliefs
LocalPower
- - - FORUM - - -
General
Alternatives
Regional
- - - NEWS - - -
RSS Feed
The Team
F.A.Q
Funding needed
- - - ACTION - - -
What you can do
Previous Events
Donate
Peak Oil & You
- - - LEARN - - -
Peak Oil Books
Understand 'Peak Oil'
Peak Oil in 4mins
Peak Oil DVDs
Beginner's Guide to Peak Oil
Mailing List
Name:
Email address :
  Receive HTML?
Visitors: 51463003
Username

Password

Remember me
Password Reminder
Who's Online
We have 118 guests online
Events Calendar
July 2010
M T W T F S S
2829301 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31 1
SPACE HEATING PDF Print E-mail
Sunday, 26 March 2006
How to keep warm after the peak! For space heating i.e, to heat your house via radiators then you can choose to install either:

1) A wood or coal (standard multifuel) burning stove with back boiler for connection to your radiators. This will burn logs and coal. This is cheap to install (£2000-3000) but less efficient than any fossil fuel system so burns more wood. If you have a large, poorly insulated, house then this might be an issue. It requires lots of user input. You can opt for a solid fuel burning cooker with back boiler such as a Rayburn, then you can cook as well.

2) A pellet boiler using wood pellets, again with a back boiler. These are a lot more efficient and are automated so require less user input. They cost more, probably around £3000-£4000 including installation and the downside at the moment is the availabilty of the pellets which is poor. Hopefully this will change, but in a PO world the distribution of pellets might be an issue. There are boilers that will burn both pellets and logs which gets over this problem a bit.

3) A gassifying wood boiler. This is state-of-the-art technolgy with efficiencies of 90%. It burns logs very slowly (burns off the gases from the wood) and so requires very lttle input. It also saves on fuel and you can use local wood. The downside is that you normally need to connect it to a large hot water storage cylinder (an accumulator) which acts like a back boiler and heats your radiators. This pushes the cost up to £5000/6000+ and you also need space for the boiler and cylinder which is big. Also in a PO world, will such technologically advanced boilers be a good thing or bad? Will there be the constant electricity supply needed to run this boiler and will there be the infrastructure in place for maintenance and parts etc?

4) If you think there will be no problem with electricy supply in the future then you might opt for a heat pump. This is a refrigerator in reverse which extracts heat from a pipe in the ground and puts it into your house. For every kw of electricty used it will give you 3-4kw in your home. These are expensive, starting from £8000+ and are limited in their output (about 10-12kw normally) so you need a very well insulated house. You also need a lot of space in you garden for the pipe or you can pay the extra cost and fit it in a bore hole to save space.

For hot water (usually called dhw - domestic hot water) you can use all of the above as normal. A series of pumps, thermostats and valves will divert the heat from the back boiler or other chosen heat source and will circulate it around a cylinder of stored water (often called the immersion cylinder as found in all homes with airing cupboards). The simplest system, such as a stove and back boiler (as in 1 above) will heat the dhw cylider via gravity circulation which means that you have hot water regardless of whether you have electrcity because a pump is not needed. If, in a PO world, we have a problem with electricity supply then this will be an advantage. You can also use a solar panel to heat your water. This will cost about £3000-4000 and will heat the dhw cylinder during daylight hours. This reduces the load on the solid fuel boiler. A solar panel will provide most of your dhw in the summer and some in the winter. You may need to have a different dhw cylinder installed with extra connection points which can be costly (an additional £500-1000).

If your budget can extend to it then PV (PhotoVoltaic) panels and a wind turbine will give you electricty which can be used for dhw as well as lighting and electric car charging of course. These are however expensive (several thousand each) and you are reliant on decent light levels and a blowing wind.

As you can see there are several options. The issue of what is the best system therefore comes down to budget and how far you want to gurantee your comforts in the future depending on possible PO scenarios. Good insulation, warmer clothes and a few lifestyle changes will probably make as much difference. You also have to take into account what your current plumbing set up is. If you have underfloor heating for instance then changing to the wrong system can present problems, you would probably have to go for using an accumulator or heat pump as in options 3 and 4 above. It is of course hard to advise specifically in this forum. Also, the size of boiler needed depends on your house construction. A typical new build 5 bed house might only require a 10-15kw boiler where as an old C.16th house of the same size with little insulation and badly fitted windows might require 20-25kw. The prices I've given above will no doubt vary also.
Energy Bulletin
Energy Bulletin -
  • The cybernetics of black knights

    What do fifty years of failed fusion research, today's avant-garde believers in the Singularity, and the antics of the characters in "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" have in common? The answer lies in information, which forms -- along with energy and matter -- a triad of principles that...

  • Happy homestead happenstances

    How many slick tricks have you learned about farming and gardening more or less by accident? My favorite example happened because of laziness.

    read more

  • Transport - July 28

    -Modern cargo ships slow to the speed of the sailing clippers
    -Testing a London 'Cycle Superhighway'
    -Festival transforms autobahn into world's longest street party

    read more

Peak Oil News
Peak Oil News
OilDrum Europe
The Oil Drum: Europe - Analysis and Discussion of the European Energy Gap and Peak Oil
Oil Drum
The Oil Drum - Discussions about Energy and Our Future
Transition Culture
Transition Culture
ASPO
ASPO International | The Association for the Study of Peak Oil and Gas
Energy Resources
energyresources at Yahoo! Groups

Mambo is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.