I've been thinking about the effectiveness and costs of heating. We mostly use gas for heating, but in a newly built conservatory we have electric underfloor heating and also an air conditioning unit which functions as an air source heat pump in the winter.
For heating it seems to me that gas has to be the best. Simple electric heating, such as our underfloor heating, or heating via radiators or storage heaters requires the power station to generate electricity, which is known to be less than 50% efficient, and then there are distribution losses, which reduce the efficiency further. Probably for each unit of gas or similar fossil fuel burnt at the power station, we are getting the equivalent of burning 0.3 units in our home. In the UK a large amount of energy in the form of heat is simply dumped into the atmosphere. In Denmark the overall efficiency of energy production is improved by using the heat from power stations for space heating in nearby urban locations, and I believe they have some of the most efficient power stations in the world.
Our domestic situation changes somewhat when we consider using the air source heat pump. As measured, it seems to have a factor of between 2.5 and 3 re electricity input versus heat output. 2kW of electricity in produces close to 6kW of heat out. Thus using the heat pump may overall from our point of view not be significantly worse than burning gas, though would still cost more. However, there would still be a significant amount of heat generated "on our behalf" at the power station for each unit of heat we consume using the heat pump.
Of course the UK seems to want to have an "out of sight, out of mind" to electricity generation, and this also promulgates the view that electricity is clean. Clearly it is rather clean at the point of use, but at the generating plant it may be anything but. It's not totally unreasonable. Switch transport and other energy consuming systems in cities to electricity, and the local environment is improved. On the other hand, the environment in some other part of the country may be worsened as a result.
For heating it seems to me that gas has to be the best. Simple electric heating, such as our underfloor heating, or heating via radiators or storage heaters requires the power station to generate electricity, which is known to be less than 50% efficient, and then there are distribution losses, which reduce the efficiency further. Probably for each unit of gas or similar fossil fuel burnt at the power station, we are getting the equivalent of burning 0.3 units in our home. In the UK a large amount of energy in the form of heat is simply dumped into the atmosphere. In Denmark the overall efficiency of energy production is improved by using the heat from power stations for space heating in nearby urban locations, and I believe they have some of the most efficient power stations in the world.
Our domestic situation changes somewhat when we consider using the air source heat pump. As measured, it seems to have a factor of between 2.5 and 3 re electricity input versus heat output. 2kW of electricity in produces close to 6kW of heat out. Thus using the heat pump may overall from our point of view not be significantly worse than burning gas, though would still cost more. However, there would still be a significant amount of heat generated "on our behalf" at the power station for each unit of heat we consume using the heat pump.
Of course the UK seems to want to have an "out of sight, out of mind" to electricity generation, and this also promulgates the view that electricity is clean. Clearly it is rather clean at the point of use, but at the generating plant it may be anything but. It's not totally unreasonable. Switch transport and other energy consuming systems in cities to electricity, and the local environment is improved. On the other hand, the environment in some other part of the country may be worsened as a result.
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