Now don't let everything be dragged out of you. Can you describe how you implemented it, which heat pump, the setup of the cooling, so that one might be able to do it themselves as well.
You assume that the base price for gas remains the same and that these ~1.6 cents are added on. That’s what your crystal ball says. Mine says that something will happen to the gas price when the Russian at the other end of Nordstream II fully opens the gas tap. What these additional 100 billion m³ of H-gas will do to the gas price is something everyone can imagine for themselves. Your entire argument structure apparently relies on the simplification that the electricity price consists exclusively of the costs for the stock market electricity price and the Renewable Energy Sources Act surcharge. At the moment, that accounts for only about ~40% of the working price. You conveniently leave out the exploding grid fees and concession costs that arise thanks to the “All-Electric Society.” However, these currently make up 25% of the electricity price and, as mentioned, will skyrocket in the coming years and more than consume the few cents increase in the Renewable Energy Sources Act surcharge. That’s what my crystal ball says.
I am not arguing at all; I am just repeating. You, on the other hand, argue, as you say, with your crystal ball. Hm. I have merely repeated what the current political will is. No speculation or anything else. In fact, I do not believe that the new pipeline will change anything in the end customer price. You save the (expensive) transit through third countries, but you want to quickly refinance the investment in return. And it does not change the generation price either.