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Reducin e nergy fo
Both satisfaction and frustration have accompanied our efforts to reduce our household’s energy footprint – the impact on the planet, including contribution to climate change, of our energy use for heating, lighting and appliances. We began our efforts in 1975 and, spurred on by the increasing problems facing our planet, have kept going. The financial cost has been quite high but we have saved by living simply and been lucky to have two small legacies to help out. Insulating your home is a good start and our first steps were installing rockwool cavity wall insulation and three inches of attic insulation. Now, belatedly keeping up with recommendations, we’re adding another five inches using Warmcel (made from recycled newspaper!). Ten inches is ideal but we use our loft for storage and with joists only four inches high raising insulation to eight inches involved much time-consuming DIY! We draught-proofed everything we could and in 2002 installed double-glazed windows with FSC wood frames from Green Building Store – we try to minimise the environmental impacts of the energy-saving products that we use. Another early achievement was to generate some energy we use sustainably and we’re delighted with our solar water heating panel installed in 1992. It has reliably produced hot water ever since – abundantly on sunny summer days and more frugally during bright
winter days. Solar operated pumps are available now but ours uses a little electricity. In 1999 we switched to a renewable electricity supplier to match our consumption with generation from sustainable sources. We are now with Good Energy. Switching suppliers is easy – for example over the Internet at www.greenelectricity.org. This website recommends Good Energy and Ecotricity as the ‘greenest’ suppliers in a market complicated by the Renewable Option and explains why some so-called ‘green’ suppliers are not really! Our renewable electricity costs more and anyway shouldn’t be wasted, so we use low energy light bulbs, replaced our worn-out fridge and washing machine with very energy efficient models and don’t possess a tumble dryer or freezer, the most energy-hungry appliances. We practise the energy-saving tips in Walk Cheerfully, Step Lightly but frustratingly having worked hard to save a few watt-minutes I do stupid things like forgetting to switch off my oven and waste a kilowatthour! People question whether small savings in energy are worth the bother, but little bits add up to significant amounts if enough people bother. Besides in the end the planet may be saved from tipping over the edge by preventing the emission of just one gram of carbon dioxide – remember the straw that broke the camel’s back! We aren’t on gas so had oil
central heating and decided this year to install an alternative system. The Green Building Bible lists carbon dioxide emissions for various heating sources. Wood is best (if sustainably sourced and efficiently burnt) and next come heat pumps – if correctly used. So we investigated woodfired boilers. Nowadays these are fairly automatic – pellet-fired boilers completely so – but big! Our preferred option, an Okofen wood pellet boiler with automatic pellet-feeding hopper, would have necessitated building an extension to house it. This would eat up our financial resources and could cause more greenhouse gas emissions than we subsequently saved. Frustratingly too late for us, Okofen have now introduced a prefab wooden shed to house the boiler and hopper. So we considered the most efficient heat pump. A ground source heat pump can give 4kW of output for each kW of electrical input. However we had a problem – our garden is too small! We couldn’t face destroying the entire garden to accommodate the two trenches, each one metre deep and forty metre long, for the pipes to extract heat from the ground. The alternative was a borehole 120 metres deep – but the machinery couldn’t access our garden and the cost was prohibitive. Frustrated again, we investigated air source heat pumps giving 3kW for each kW of input but cheaper
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the Friend , 5 January 2007
