Geothermal | Anyone can Save 40% on Their Electric Bill
February 22, 2009in geothermal by admin 4 Comments »
It is true, with a geothermal heat pump you can save between 30% and 40% on your electric bill according to the US Environmental Protection Agency. Geothermal Heat Exchangers as they are referred to, rely on the simple fact that the temperature under the earth stays at a consistent temperature of 45 – 70 degrees (typically about 50 degrees) depending on geographic location. By using this consistent temperature to heat and cool a house or business one avoids the expensive (and energy consuming) process of heating cold air and cooling hot air. The greatest thing about a geothermal heat exchange system is that it can be installed virtually anywhere.
This system work by first installing piping in the ground deep enough to get below the frost line or about 2 feet or more down. This piping is filled with fluid which circulates the consistent temperature up to a unit called a heat exchanger located within the house or building. The heat exchanger then does one of two things. One, it cools the building by removing the heat from the air and sending it into the ground. Two, by heating the already consistent temperature from the ground to the few degrees needed to heat the building.
The cost for purchasing and installing this system is considerably more than a typical HVAC system but carries some perks that typical systems do not. Depending on the size of your house and the earth it is resting on (stone, soil or near a pond) the system can typically cost from $15,000 to $40,000. Many systems come with as much as a 50 year guarantee. There are frequently tax savings which reduces the time involved in recouping the costs. Furthermore, beyond the long term savings of a geothermal heat pump, is the short and long term benefits of global energy conservation.
Many federal and state incentives are being given to those who install the a geothermal heat pump system, to read more see http://www.geoexchange.org/

I’ve been toying with the idea of designing and building my next house and making it a zero net energy house. I’m leaning toward a geothermal heat pump for my heating and cooling needs (along with other design features such as passive solar design, solar pv and solar thermal). Anyway, it seems very reasonable that tying a geothermal pump to a solar thermal system during the cool/cold months of the year would dramatically reduce the operational costs of a geothermal system.
Anybody have any good thoughts/resources on this? I have searched the web and don’t find many examples of this on residential projects.
I found an excelent article for you Kup. There really is quite a bit of potential in that idea. http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2008/2/18/212538/864
check it out its pretty cool
Kup:
A few technologies you can google: ’solar water heater’, ‘vacuum tube solar water heater’ (alternatively ‘evacuated tube solar water heater’), and hydronics.
The first are all about solar methods of heating water: vacuum tube is truly awesome.
The word ‘hydronics’ is not widely known. Google it and learn how the builders can put tubes in your floor for space heating, and install cooling valances to replace air conditioning.
With these you can reduce your area heating and cooling bills to zero, or very near.
Cheers, Chris
Solar photovoltaic systems are by far the most cost efficient systems for heating available