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by jrochkind1
1257 days ago
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> due to gas being so much cheaper. I'm curious where you live. The OP suggested that gas and electricity prices vary a surprising amount throughout the US, and that gas is not usually cheaper than electricity, but is sometimes. They did suggest if you are in a place where gas is a lot cheaper than electricity, that might be the one thing to make heat pumps not cost effective, but that this was not typical. I personally do not know much about this. (I don't even know how to know if my own gas is "cheaper" than electricity, since they are metered/measured in different units!) |
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Based on those prices a heat pump would need to have at least an efficiency of 3.28 (3.5 uncapped) just to break even. Given that the total cost of installation is in the range of £3k-40k there really needs to be a compelling reason to retrofit an existing house.
Some of this is due to the vagaries of the UK energy markets. The outcome is that we often end up paying renewable providers of electricity based on the cost set by gas powered stations. At the moment that price has been grossly inflated due to profiteering, we're far less reliant on imported gas than mainland Europe.
I'd like to note that the price savings and break even point have probably gotten better compared to when I last checked. If we go back to much warmer, happier times - like September 2020 - I was paying 15.999p/kWh and 2.915p/kWh for electricity and gas respectively. Prior to that it was 14.150p/kWh and 2.920p/kWh. At that point I believe an air source pump resulted in a net increase in my bill and a ground source heat pump would have taken around 30 years to pay off. I should probably recalculate when things have settled down a bit.