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A normal house uses around £250 of hot water a year. A normal house could expect to save 50-70% of that with a £5,000 system. The maths isn't hard - 28 year payback at best. The key thing is that the proportion of our energy bills due to hot water is much less than most of us think.  It's also much easier and cheaper to make savings by reducing your demand (less baths, combi boilers, low flow showerheads etc) rather than trying to make you own. 

And once you do this the paybacks are even longer.

That's not to say solar thermal is always way down the list of things to do, and it can be a really good solution for properties off the gas network or where you have a rugby team staying in your home.

So back to the question at hand.  Why am I installing a solar thermal system? 5 reasons really...

1) I'm starting from a situation where there is no heating system (I took out the storage heaters and multi point gas boiler) so installing a solar thermal system in addition to the rest of the work will be a marginal extra cost.
2) I've got a young and growing family and there are likely be lots evening baths (especially when the rugby age arrives)
3) With a super insulated house the proportion of our energy bills that are due to hot water will be relatively large and so achieving our personal ambition to be as low impact as possible means starting to tackle some of those areas usually less worthwhile.  It'll be interesting how long we can survive on solar thermal and the wood burner before the gas boiler gets turned on for the winter.
4) I expect gas prices to rise
5) There is still a chance the Renewable Heat Incentive tariffs - rightly or wrongly - will be set at a level to make solar thermal systems financially worthwhile.

The Renewable Heat Incentive Premium Payment of £300 isn't one of our reasons as it doesn't make much impact.  We do however welcome the decision to gather more data before setting tariffs.

I'll blog a bit more about the details when it gets installed...

 


Comments

30/08/2011 16:22

So Chris, how do the figures stack up? For example I would have thought that the total saving of replacing your existing 'heating' with a condensing combi would be only very slightly more than the total saving you might get by installing a condensing boiler with well insulated cylinder and solar thermal panel. I'd be particularly interested in the £/tonne CO2 of the marginal cost against the relative saving. D

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30/03/2012 19:56

Your general point is correct, but £5000 is an expensive solar system. you can have a perfectly good one for £2500, certainly £3000. I DIYed mine for £800 and it does indeed supply most of our hot water. Around 80% I'd say (in a low-usage household). The numbers look pretty good if you can DIY, and not bad if you keep the install cost down. It's the tank and the fitting time that are the expensive components.

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