Pick your ground source heat pump installer wisely!


Posted July 19, 2016 by NeedtoKnow

Isoenergy, one of the UK's leading sustainable energy companies, review the latest report from The Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) regarding the results of a programme to monitor the performance of a number of ground source heat pumps.

 
The Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) have recently published a report on the results of a programme to monitor the performance of a number of ground source heat pumps.
It makes for depressing reading about the state of the UK Heat Pump installation industry. DECC have monitored twenty-one ground source heat pumps over a twelve-month period with an installed capacity of 910 kW.

Amongst their key findings are:

* Ground source heat pumps operating in the UK ought to have a seasonal performance factor (SPF) of better than 3.
* 57% of the heat pumps they monitored had an SPF better than 2.5
* 33% of the sites had an SPF of better than DECC’s target of 3.

In other words, two-thirds of these heat pumps performed worse than the target of 3.

Fortunately, they note that all of the systems they monitored would have produced less CO2 emissions than an equivalent oil-fired boiler and nearly all of them would have saved the client money.

DECC note in their report that the best performing heat pumps are characterised by factors that are

“… aspects of system design, installation and operation and therefore point towards the importance of getting these three elements right in order to obtain good in-situ heat pump performance.”

Isoenergy can only agree. You get what you pay for. Designing and installing the system properly in the first place is the key to an efficient and long-lasting system. Depressingly common ignorance, old-fashioned mechanical design that is unaware of the need to design for low temperatures, and installation companies that cut corners to reduce the initial price ticket of a system at the cost of its long-term efficiency are the root cause of this dismal performance.

isoenergy have been monitoring the performance of some of the systems they have installed over the last few years. Their sample is a little larger than DECC’s. They have monitored 46 properties, many of them hard-to-heat, old, listed buildings that many people incorrectly consider unsuited to heating with Ground Source Heat Pumps. These 46 properties between them have an installed capacity of about 1,700 kWs. All of these sites perform with an SPF of greater than 2.5. An SPF of 2.5 is the rock-bottom. Below this level and DECC does not count the system as ‘renewable’ and it is not eligible for the RHI. 83% of Isoenergy’s sites have a SPF of greater than 3, and the average SPF is 3.5.

A better efficiency translates directly to greater fuel cost savings and lower CO2 emissions. The difference between an SPF of 2.8 and 3.5 could be equivalent to a saving of as much 15%-20% of the cost of the installation over the lifetime of the equipment (assumptions apply!).

While the results from DECC’s trial are very disappointing and potentially damaging to the heat pump industry, we at isoenergy we are not surprised by them. They highlight that selecting and investing in the right partner to deliver the system that is correct for your property is vital. With ten-years and over 800 installations-worth of experience in the market and an SPF rating of a full point above the trial figures, isoenergy have proven that the investment in a GSHP system can be the right one!

For more details and to view the data in graphical form please visit http://www.isoenergy.co.uk/latest-news/isoenergy-news/pick-your-installer-wisely-isoenergy-s-heat-pumps-substantially-out-perform-the-average#_ftn1
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Issued By Isoenergy
Website pick-your-installer-wisely-isoenergy-s-heat-pumps-substantially-out-perform-the-average
Phone 01293 821345
Business Address The Stables, Meath Green Lane
Horley, Surrey, RH6 8JA
Country United Kingdom
Categories Energy
Tags green energy , ground source heat pump , gshp , heat pump , isoenergy , renewable energy , sustainable energy
Last Updated July 19, 2016