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| abode magazine
home heating & energy saving
Energy: we are building the future The decisions we make in heating and powering our homes will be felt for generations. We need to get it right.
H
ow do you answer a perfect example of a six-anda-half-year-old’s logic: ‘Why did they paint all the houses black?’ Sitting in a hotel, with photographs of old Glasgow street scenes on the walls it had to be explained that in the ‘old days’ all the lovely light-coloured stone buildings she sees were once covered in a layer of soot. ‘What’s soot?’ Today’s weans are growing up with energy from the sun, water, wind, plants, soil and air as the norm. The idea that the world was powered and heated by digging up combustible sedimentary rock from deep underground, then setting fire to it, will seem, one day, as shocking as sending children down mines to pull coal carts or up chimneys to clean the flues. And from an adult, bill-paying point of view, it seems just
as shocking that houses were once so poorly insulated that the heat and money were just frittered away. When you build a home you are building the future – your grand, and great-grandchildren, will be playing in it one day and so might theirs. Thanks to today’s innovations they will be living in a far greener, cleaner time. As we strive to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and our dependence on non-renewable energy we can call on advances in building design and materials to make new-build properties need far less energy to keep them warm and welllit. We can improve dramatically the energy efficiency of older buildings through renovation. It goes without saying that any new-build designs come with top of the range insulation and opportunities for solar gain as standard, as do all SIPS and kit homes. The method of providing heat then comes down to your
choice and circumstances; with items like solar panels and heat source tailored to location, design and budget. And never forgetting that traditional Scottish favourite, wood, be it biomass systems or a log burning stove.
Sourcing your heat
Air source heat pumps extract heat from outside air in the same way that a fridge extracts heat from its inside. It is constantly being renewed naturally and can be used to heat radiators, under floor systems, convector heaters and hot water in the home. An air-source heat pump can get heat out of air even when the temperature is as low as -15°c. Ground source heat pumps are more efficient than air source ones because heat is transferred through the ground via the movement of water, and water has a greater capacity