xMisterDx
2022-11-19 20:15:42
- #1
Even if you just want to rant: because neither heating engineers nor people have any knowledge or interest in an efficient setting. Even with an annual performance factor of 3, I still come to about 10-12 cents per kWh. Still less than the gas price brake.
To be honest, I also suspect that prices will develop accordingly in parallel.
Oh, silly me. I thought it was due to physics, which for an air-to-water heat pump in a normal winter allows no more than 3.5, rather less.
You will be surprised where the electricity price will go once we start storing hydrogen on a large scale to burn it, generate electricity, and use that to operate the air-to-water heat pump. 50 cents/kWh is quite realistic...