Energy Pricing

When you are choosing a heating system, another factor to consider is the pricing models used by your local energy utility. For example, many electric utilities have an “offload” or “offpeak” rate. This practice originates from times when energy usage was much lower during the night.

Because traditional power generation stations cannot be switched on and off easily, the utilities wanted to smooth out the power demand to keep the generation stations running efficiently. Hence pricing models were developed to encourage energy usage during low usage periods.

The problem now is that the generation capacity is often stretched all the time, but industry and domestic consumers have become accustomed to this low price and it is difficult – economically and politically - to move them away from the artificially low pricing

Whenever energy is provided at an artificially low price it encourages wasteful usage. The cost of buying an energy efficient device can’t be justified because the ongoing cost of buying the energy is not high enough to create a payback on buying the more energy efficient device.

Thus you may face a decision where the heating appliance that costs you th eleast is th emost polluting. In this case its up to you to make a decision you feel is the right one - assuming you can afford to make the choice.

Note: It’s reasonably fair to say that today hardly any energy is priced at a true market rate where the full environmental impact of the carbon emitted are included in the cost.

This is the issue the emerging carbon trading markets are designed to address. With carbon trading, the cost of dealing with the carbon created during the power generation (or any other industrial process) is made visible and then can be handled like any other business cost.

However, the system is likely to be distorted by Governments handing out permits to those industries that lobby the hardest.

So the most polluting industries will get special dispensation or "let offs" and will be less driven to reduce their emissions. This is why you can make a diference by choosing the least polluting energy option.

For heating gas produces 4 times less carbon than traditional electric heaters.

New, efficient, reverse cycle air conditioners are the exception. They don’t "burn" electricity to produce heat rather they use the electricity to move heat from one place to another. e..g from the outside ito your home when heating and the reverse when cooling.

Look for the COP rating when buying a reverse cycle air conditioner - the higher the better. If the COP = 4 the air conditioner is as efficient as gas for heating 

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