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by broken-kebab
516 days ago
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I see, but it's still mostly a theory unless we count in all small nuances. Like for a place where winters are really frosty heat-pump usually can't help enough (my own experience), and it seems they come with resistive heating built-in nowadays. Which may change the picture. Also, I'm not a specialist, but my guess is that delivery (or how they call it in the industry) of electricity can be priced in potentially wide range. |
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It was from a "what is the best way to lower our use of fossil fuels" perspective, and acknowledged that switching out all boiler systems for heat pumps would be a high cost, but it wasn't really a study on the economics of it. Just a resource usage perspective.