Construction costs are currently skyrocketing

  • Erstellt am 2021-04-23 10:46:58

halmi

2022-12-07 14:46:45
  • #1
We prefer to finance more of the "same old" rather than actually making progress. Instead of capping the electricity for heat pumps at, for example, 20 cents and thus creating real incentives to convert existing systems, you can now "heat" electricity at 40 cents and, as in our case, even beyond 65 cents per kWh. Pellet customers are completely ripped off, and suddenly even oil heating is back in the race cost-wise.
 

WilderSueden

2022-12-07 14:54:37
  • #2
The question is where the electricity is supposed to come from when we start installing heat pumps with 60-degree flow temperature in unrenovated old buildings. And who actually pays the difference between the capped and the actual price. It is right to finance the transition instead of the status quo. But we should not put the cart before the horse.
 

se_na_23

2022-12-07 14:55:26
  • #3
I see it similarly... a heat pump is not attractive with electricity prices from 30 cents.

Pellets currently cost 480/ton here with a 10-ton purchase.
 

Tolentino

2022-12-07 15:09:59
  • #4
The state should finance heat pumps on credit. Makes perfect sense, right?!
 

Kati2022

2022-12-07 15:36:00
  • #5
Currently... Now all households have filled their storage for the winter, which is why the price has also dropped. In September, however, it looked different...
 

se_na_23

2022-12-07 15:37:46
  • #6
Only know it from the kindergarten that ordered two weeks ago...
 
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