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J Hancock18/11/2021 09:07:18
869 forum posts

I have asked my Belgian friends many times, none know of any plans Belgium has to make gas boilers redundant and heat-pumps mandatory in the future.

Grindstone Cowboy18/11/2021 12:36:15
1160 forum posts
73 photos

I seem to have noticed an increase in gas boiler adverts recently - getting rid of stock, or am I just cynical? Might just be the time of year.

Interestingly, the one for Worcester Bosch states they are hydrogen compatible (or some such phrase), so presumably there are plans to add hydrogen to the gas mix.

Speaking of hydrogen, I was watching an old episode of Top Gear yesterday which featured a hydrogen-cell powered Honda (now no longer produced), which to me would seem to be the best idea of all if they can get fuel distribution sorted out. Link here to the Wikipedia article for the vehicle.

Rob

Links to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honda_Clarity#Honda_FCX_Clarity_(2008%E2%80%932014)

SillyOldDuffer18/11/2021 13:54:44
10668 forum posts
2415 photos
Posted by J Hancock on 18/11/2021 09:07:18:

I have asked my Belgian friends many times, none know of any plans Belgium has to make gas boilers redundant and heat-pumps mandatory in the future.

I don't think anyone in the world plans to make heat-pumps mandatory - they're just one way of filling the energy gap. If they happen to suit your home, all well and good, otherwise look for something else.

Belgium doesn't have any plans to make gas boilers redundant because the EU are still discussing how best to implement the change. They've rejected discontinuing gas boilers from 2025 as too difficult to achieve in that timescale. Instead, they've set policy requiring member states to phase boilers out rather than set hard targets. It's because some European countries are better placed to reduce gas consumption than others.

Consider also if the supply of gas is reliable! Is it smart for Belgium or anyone else in Europe to rely on it? A good proportion of Natural Gas enters Europe from Russia via Belarus, where this week it was again used a political lever: “We heat Europe, and they are still threatening us that they’ll shut the borders,” said Lukashenko in an emergency meeting with his top ministers on Thursday. “And what if we cut off [the transit of] natural gas to them? So I would recommend that the leadership of Poland, Lithuanian and other brainless people think before they speak.” (Guardian report 11Nov)

There's much to be said in favour of replacing imported coal, oil and gas with locally sourced Wind, Tidal, Solar, Hydro and Nuclear.

Dave

J Hancock18/11/2021 15:50:55
869 forum posts

?????/

Just what type of heating will builders be choosing to install in new builds when they are no longer allowed (mandated ) to use gas boilers in 2030/5 ish.?

Heat pumps are the latest wheeze by the State.

Grindstone Cowboy18/11/2021 16:17:59
1160 forum posts
73 photos

A friend works for a large construction/services company, and he tells me they are taking out gas boilers they installed only three years ago from schools, replacing them with heat pumps. Mainly because there are government grants available for the change. He also mentioned they are having to double the number of radiators too.

When installing replacement boilers (which they are being asked to do for some commercial properties in advance of restrictions coming in around 2025 (which are not applicable to domestic systems)), it is becoming apparent that the amount of gas coming through the mains is inadequate - they are finding there is an unacceptable drop in pressure, such that it falls below the manufacturer's safe lower limit. Apparently the "solution" is for the gas suppliers to reduce the pressure in surrounding properties - the proper fix would be to replace the aged cast-iron main with something larger, but in one case that would involve digging up the Mancunian Way (one of the main routes into Manchester), so that's unlikely to happen.

Rob

larry phelan 118/11/2021 16:23:36
1346 forum posts
15 photos

China and India are doing what Europe, and England did years ago, so nothing new there.

What,s sauce for the goose, is sauce for the gander.

History repeats itself.

duncan webster18/11/2021 17:29:28
5307 forum posts
83 photos
Posted by J Hancock on 15/11/2021 14:32:44:

Anyone have a view on the 'effect' of the massive movements of water which have taken place over the last 100 years ?

For example , the Aral sea has disappeared , the 3 Gorges has appeared , as has the Hoover dam , Aswan , etc etc.

The area of the earth is ~510,000,000 sq km, 71% of which is sea/ocean, so 362,100,000 sq km. The Hoover dam holds 2,480,000 cu.m of water, so if you emptied it into the sea the sea level would rise by 6.8 * 10^-9 mm, so you'd need to build a lot of dams to make any difference. That's 6.8 picometres, a hydrogen atom is 120 picometres.

All data from t'internet

J Hancock18/11/2021 19:36:12
869 forum posts

Thank you DW, with that knowledge I will sleep well tonight.

Tim Stevens18/11/2021 20:45:31
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1779 forum posts
1 photos

Dear J Hancock

Heat pumps are the sort of 'wheeze' that your mum and dad kept in the kitchen so your baby food didn't go off. Don't just be grateful, try to understand. Sillyness should have been given up with the baby food.

Cheers, Tim

Nigel Graham 218/11/2021 21:57:38
3293 forum posts
112 photos

I am told by a friend in the trade - self-employed small-works builder and GasSafe registered gas fitter - that the major boiler manufacturers are now making boilers easily adjusted to take methane/hydrogen mixes, and ultimately just hydrogen.

Whence the hydrogen is another matter, of course.

He also pointed out that if you a house with a combination boiler and microbore plumbing, if you want to fit a heat-pump instead all the pipes and radiators will need replacing as well - oh and you have to consider what to do about hot water for the kitchen and bath/shower. I suppose it's possible heat-pumps will become developed to cope with existing systems but the snag is that the amount of heat they put into the water and the maximum temperature are a lot lower than a decent gas-boiler can give; hence the new radiators and pipes.

My pal then remarked that his house (an ex-Council 1940s end-of-terrace) would not be suitable for a heat-pump, at least not without a heck of a lot of work including finding room for the indirect hot-water tank. Mine (Edwardian end-of-terrace) certainly won't be then.

Somewhere in a small collection I have of engineering text-books from the first half of last centu ry is an intriguing analysis of a heat-pump driven by a small Diesel engine, showing the heat gained for the building is greater than that obtained from simply burning the oil. That does sound like something-for-nothing but I am not going to argue with a book written for professional engineers, on engine thermodynamics!

J Hancock18/11/2021 22:14:44
869 forum posts

Not silliness TS , blame any shortage of gas for domestic heating on decisions made by 'officials' in high places who sold off our North Sea gas for quick financial gain.

Used for domestic and industrial purposes only it would have lasted 'indefinitely'.

Used to make electricity , almost criminal waste.

Nuclear and clean coal was the way to go , plus renewables of course.

Sam B 118/11/2021 23:12:12
10 forum posts
Posted by J Hancock on 18/11/2021 22:14:44:

Not silliness TS , blame any shortage of gas for domestic heating on decisions made by 'officials' in high places who sold off our North Sea gas for quick financial gain.

Used for domestic and industrial purposes only it would have lasted 'indefinitely'.

Used to make electricity , almost criminal waste.

Nuclear and clean coal was the way to go , plus renewables of course.

burning gas to make electricity and then using that electricity to run heat pumps is a far more efficient way to heat homes than burning gas directly; switching over to heat pumps allows our limited resources go much further

Paul Kemp19/11/2021 00:49:21
798 forum posts
27 photos
Posted by Sam B 1 on 18/11/2021 23:12:12:

burning gas to make electricity and then using that electricity to run heat pumps is a far more efficient way to heat homes than burning gas directly; switching over to heat pumps allows our limited resources go much further

Have you any credible figures to back that up? Granted CCGT is pretty efficient but taking into account grid losses and then whatever the efficiency of a heat pump is compared to the efficiency of a new condensing boiler that sounds a bold claim?

Paul.

Sam B 119/11/2021 02:40:01
10 forum posts
Posted by Paul Kemp on 19/11/2021 00:49:21:
Posted by Sam B 1 on 18/11/2021 23:12:12:

burning gas to make electricity and then using that electricity to run heat pumps is a far more efficient way to heat homes than burning gas directly; switching over to heat pumps allows our limited resources go much further

Have you any credible figures to back that up? Granted CCGT is pretty efficient but taking into account grid losses and then whatever the efficiency of a heat pump is compared to the efficiency of a new condensing boiler that sounds a bold claim?

Paul.

hi paul, i'll give it a go!

the efficiency of heat pumps comes mostly from them providing more useful heating output for the energy put in since they're moving heat that already exists instead of directly creating more of it. they're typically around 2.5 - 3.5 "coefficiency of performance" for air-source heat pumps (ground-source are higher but they're more complicated to install), so 1kw electricity in would provide 2.5 - 3.5kw of useful heat out

losses on the grid seem to be at most 10% from this national grid eso document https://www.nationalgrideso.com/document/144711/download

the EEA lists efficiency of thermal electricity generation hair under 50% https://www.eea.europa.eu/data-and-maps/indicators/efficiency-of-conventional-thermal-electricity-generation-4/assessment-2

with these numbers if we put 1kw of gas into a power plant we'd generate 500w of electricity, there'd be 450w at the home after transmission losses, then the heat pump would be able to provide 1.125 - 1.575 kw of useful heating

i'm not sure about the losses on the gas network because i can't seem to find anything about it online for the UK (for reference it's about 9% in the US), but even assuming zero distribution losses the gas heater would only provide 940w of heating from 1kw of gas (modern condensing boilers seem to top out at 94% efficiency)

as an aside, a COP of 3 would mean that even if your electricity costs 3x more per kw/h than your gas it would still cost about the same to heat your home

 

one of the youtube people i'm subscribed to has a fairly lengthy video talking about heat pumps and they're really quite interesting things https://youtu.be/7J52mDjZzto

edit: fixed the links!

Edited By Sam B 1 on 19/11/2021 02:48:42

JasonB19/11/2021 07:45:58
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25215 forum posts
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The biggest problem is the COP value drops off as the temperature differential becomes less so just when you want the heat most in the winter you can't get any heat out of them so have to revert to using electric for heating and hot water.

Other times of the year they are very good, many a koi pond is now heated buy them with vast savings but those are people who heat their ponds in summer and the mass of the pond acts as a good heat store in winter so only a small amount from the pump needed to keep it up at the reduced winter running temp.

The Plumber that I usually recommend to clients was telling me he has removed 4 heat pumps (at least 1 was ground source) this year as they were costing the clients too much to run as in winter they would not provide enough heating let alone hot water so were running up big electric bills.

A duel system would work the best using the heat pump when outside temps suit and gas when they don't. even then it's going to make a lot of difference how well your house is insulated and if it has heat recovery and solar panels to help reduce cost of bought in electric.

J Hancock19/11/2021 08:33:56
869 forum posts

A very good effort to justify heat-pumps Sam B , problem , compare the price we pay for gas/kwh against electricity/kwh and we see why , so few today , would choose to install heat pumps over a 'conventional ' gas boiler.

Grindstone Cowboy19/11/2021 08:37:56
1160 forum posts
73 photos

Another friend works for the firm constructing these houses near Lancaster. Apparently no heating is being installed, all heat is supposed to come from appliances used in the homes, such as TVs, cookers, computers, lighting, etc. and the very high standards of insulation keep it in.

I'm just wondering how their air-tightness works alongside current government advice to open all your windows for ten minutes several times a day devil

Rob

Links to https://www.lancs.live/news/lancashire-news/futuristic-homes-built-lancaster-new-20333681

Sam B 119/11/2021 15:13:58
10 forum posts
Posted by J Hancock on 19/11/2021 08:33:56:

A very good effort to justify heat-pumps Sam B , problem , compare the price we pay for gas/kwh against electricity/kwh and we see why , so few today , would choose to install heat pumps over a 'conventional ' gas boiler.

with current gas and electricity prices heat pumps generally work out to be about the same to run as gas boilers and can even be cheaper if you make use of off-peak hours

(**LINK**)

 

Posted by JasonB on 19/11/2021 07:45:58:

The biggest problem is the COP value drops off as the temperature differential becomes less so just when you want the heat most in the winter you can't get any heat out of them so have to revert to using electric for heating and hot water.

Other times of the year they are very good, many a koi pond is now heated buy them with vast savings but those are people who heat their ponds in summer and the mass of the pond acts as a good heat store in winter so only a small amount from the pump needed to keep it up at the reduced winter running temp.

The Plumber that I usually recommend to clients was telling me he has removed 4 heat pumps (at least 1 was ground source) this year as they were costing the clients too much to run as in winter they would not provide enough heating let alone hot water so were running up big electric bills.

A duel system would work the best using the heat pump when outside temps suit and gas when they don't. even then it's going to make a lot of difference how well your house is insulated and if it has heat recovery and solar panels to help reduce cost of bought in electric.

the COP drops as the difference between the input and the output gets larger. if we go by the coldest recorded temperature in the UK of about -27c in 1995 this COP graph suggests that if we wanted to heat a home to 15c (42c difference) it would still be close to that 3.5 COP, so should still economica

(**LINK**)

Edited By Sam B 1 on 19/11/2021 15:17:37

JasonB19/11/2021 18:52:01
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25215 forum posts
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Most people I know heat their houses to at least 20, 25plus where i've been working recently* which is not comfy. plus hot water for a family will need to be hotter and take a lot longer to heat a tank full.

People also want their heating on during the day so economy 7 is not going to be available then

 

* This is also one of the houses I mentioned the plumber having removed the ground source pump from, it's only 10-11 years old so well insulated and being on a sloping side one side of the ground floor is below ground so even more insulated by the natural warmth of the ground. Underfloor heating throughout so does not need the circulating water as hot as traditional radiators and the slabs make a good heat store. Yet it did not work well and cost considerably more than gas would. And that was for the previous owners who I doubt liked the temperature as my clients who bought the house earlier this year.

Edited By JasonB on 19/11/2021 18:55:14

SillyOldDuffer19/11/2021 20:47:24
10668 forum posts
2415 photos
Posted by JasonB on 19/11/2021 18:52:01:

Most people I know heat their houses to at least 20, 25plus ...

Am I the meanest coolest bloke on the forum? I run my heating at 18°C for 90 minutes in the morning and 17:30 to 22:00 in the evening.  During the day it's off. And I like to sleep with the window cracked open.

The secret is partly dressing warmly but mainly getting used to a lower ambient. If I toast myself at 24°C for a week or two, it feels normal and anything less is uncomfortable. Now I'm used to 18°C anything more is too hot.

Of course this is nothing compared with the good old days. I think it's Kilvert's Diary that mentions needing to break the ice on his morning bath...

And talking of Christmas, bah humbug,

Dave

 

 

Edited By SillyOldDuffer on 19/11/2021 20:47:56

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