Renewable energy just got easier

Posted by: YouGen

Comparing costs of different renewable technologies and working out potential savings in cash and carbon has just got a whole lot easier. Encraft has developed a range of calculators that help you work out all the figures, so that you can see what’s best for your house much more easily. Anyone can use them free of charge by clicking on the calculator link on the Encraft home page. You just have to register to get access.

Encraft’s chief executive Matthew Rhodes (also YouGen’s wind expert) demonstrated some of the calculators to me at Ecobuild earlier this month. Now I’ve had a bit more of a play on them I’m fascinated. I started with the property heating calculator, which gave me a bit of a jolt. I always knew that it’s expensive to heat your house with electricity, but I was staggered to find that it costs three times what I pay for gas.

But what I was really looking at is the renewable energy and energy efficiency aspects. You can alter settings to compare the difference with say loft or cavity wall insulation. I learned that my loft insulation saves me £257 a year, and that the cavity wall insulation saves an additional £313 in heating bills. However, if I swapped my bog standard double glazing for argon filled triple glazing with e-coating I’d only save £20 a year.

Next I moved on to solar, as my house faces south west. I can use the solar lookup by postcode to see how much solar energy is available in my area. The solar hot water calculator shows potential costs for the site, as well as payback in money and carbon terms. I could compare flate plate with evacuated tubes, and there’s a similar one for solar electricity. Given that there’s only enough room on my roof for one or the other, I’m pleased to see that the results tell me I was right to choose solar hot water!

The other calculator that fascinated me was the heat pump one. It shows me that heating my house with a heat pump would increase the cost by £100 more a year in heating bills, and reduce my carbon emissions by just 15 per cent. Not great for me, or for the environment. If, however, I was heating with electricity a heat pump would be a tremendous improvement on all fronts.

So, if you’re thinking about which renewable energy would be best for your house I highly recommend a bit of a play on the Encraft calculators.

Cathy Debenham is founder of YouGen – renewable energy made easy. She blogs regularly about energy efficiency and renewable energy.

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4 Responses to “Renewable energy just got easier”

  1. Tepsy says:

    No sooner do you appear on ooffoo but Treehugger picks up up too :) The power of ooffoo strikes again! Well done for a great article :) http://www.treehugger.com/files/2009/03/world-water-day-th-blog-love.php

  2. Rachelle Strauss says:

    Amazing about the double glazing. We are seriously considering this – the curtains move when there is a breeze in winter! But now I just don’t know. It’s a lot of money to invest, but if it makes you feel warmer, then I’m not sure how it could only save

  3. Rachelle Strauss says:

    Ah, I see. I totally misunderstood then. thanks for clarifying things for me, Cathy :)

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