Heat pump presentation

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1 Heat Pumps and the Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) By Graham Johnson

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RenEnergy presentation at Petersfield Renewable Energy Day 8 October 2011

Transcript of Heat pump presentation

Page 1: Heat pump presentation

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Heat Pumps and the Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI)

By Graham Johnson

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27% of UK CO2 emissions come from domestic heating, lighting & appliances

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How does a heat pump work??

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Heat Pumps

● Defined by where the low grade heat is sourced from

– Ground (8oC to 12oC)... source heat pump

– Air (30oC to -15oC)... source heat pump

– Water (4oC-10oC)... source heat pump

● Concentrates low grade heat (-15oC to 12oC) to provide useful heat for space heating and hot water in your home up to 55oC

● Contrary to popular belief heat pumps are capable of covering entire space/pool heating AND hot water loads annually if required

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What is COP?

● Heat pump efficiency is measured using the parameter CoP

● CoP = “Coefficient of Performance

Total energy output (KWh) CoP = ------------------------------------

Electrical input (KWh)

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Heat Pump efficiencies

● Electric Heater – COP 1.0!

● Ground Source – Seasonal COP’s 4.5

– Horizontal collector

– Borehole – closed

● Water Source – Seasonal COP’s 5.5

– Horizontal collector eg lake, river, canal

– Borehole – open

● Air Source – Seasonal COP’s 3.5

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● Design/installation considerations:– Budget

– Heat loss of building

– Retrofitting can be disruptive

– Emitter requirements

– Available land and access for the ground loops

– Existing utility supplies: 16kW largest on single phase

– Soil type (wet clay = good, dry sand = bad)

– Need large plant room to accommodate pump, buffer tank and pipework

– Can also provide cooling

Ground Source Heat Pumps

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Ground source heat pumps – typical excavation

Ground collectors

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GSHP - sources of heat from the ground

Boreholes

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Large installation: 32kW Viessmann, 200l buffer 500l DHW with LPG backup

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Community installation: 16kW Vaillant GSHP

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● Design/installation considerations:– Require planning permission

– Require space for outdoor unit and space for plant

– Monobloc or split

– Cheaper and easier to integrate than GSHP

– High temp ASHP can be integrated with existing emitter system

– Low temp ASHP will require special tank for hot water and emitter such as UFH

– Work well in cities/multiple unit scenarios

– Design and sizing KEY (a 16kW ASHP only produces 16KW when it is 7 degrees at -5 it will produce 12kW)

– Noise considerations

Air Source Heat Pumps

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8kW Air Source Heat Pump: Domestic application

Daikin Altherma 8kW installation - Lindford

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Twin 16kW Air Source Heat Pump: Industrial application

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● Underfloor Heating

● Convention Radiators

● Special ‘Low temperature’ radiators

How to get heat into the building?

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Example:- Existing 5 bedroom house, existing radiators, double glazed, average insulation, possibility of mains gas, daily family use. Annual energy usage = 36,000kWh

●Oil fuel bill = £2,160 Pa (6p/kWh)

●Gas fuel bill = £1,440 Pa (4p/kWh)

●ASHP fuel bill = £1,340 Pa (3.7p/kWh)

●GSHP fuel bill = £1,170 Pa (3.25p/kWh)

Note: No FIT benefits included only efficiency savings

Running costs comparison

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● The concept of the RHI has been around since April 2010 but it was only officially announced in March 2011

● Aim is to encourage people to switch to renewable heat source from fossil fuels

● Many aspects still to be clarified !

● 2 phases:-

– first phase began in Aug 2011

– second phase begins in October 2012

● Phase one: long term tariff support targeted in the non-domestic sectors (industrial, business and public sectors). There is also support for households through the RHPP (Renewable Heat Premium Payment)

● Phase two will see households moved to long-term tariff support.

● See www.energysavingtrust.org.uk

Renewable Heat Incentive

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● To qualify for RHI installation will have to be OFGEM accredited. Ofgem will determine whether an installation meets criteria such as acceptable heat use and metering arrangements

● Projects under 45kW will have to use MCS accredited products and MCS accredited installers

● Owner will have obligations:

Maintain equipment

To provide information to Ofgem

To allow inspection

Eligibility Criteria

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Domestic Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI)

● RHPP (Renewable Heat Premium Payment) vouchers available - basically a one off payment for 2011/12 until they have sorted out the level of annual RHI.

● Those who take up RHPP will be eligible for RHI tariff from October 2012

● RHI will be backdated for accredited systems installed from 15th July 2009 (but no RHPP available for these systems)

● Eligible technologies and tariff rates - see table

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RHPP

Technology Voucher value

Ground Source Heat Pump* £1250

Air Source Heat Pump* £850

Solar Thermal £300

Biomass* £950

* You can only apply if you do not currently use gas as your main heating fuel

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2121

Question Time

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● The following technologies are eligible

Ground Source/Water Source Heat Pumps

Solar Thermal

Biomass Boilers

Anaerobic digesters

● Heat will be metered and support calculated from the amount of eligible heat multiplied by the tariff rate.

● The tariffs will payable quarterly over a 20 year period

● Owner of the system will have to apply to Ofgem for the RHI support. Application will be online, by post or over the phone.

Commercial tariff – how it works

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Commercial RHI Tariff Rates

Technology SScale STariff Level TaTariff Lifetime

Small Ground Source

<100kW 4.3p 20 yrs

Large Ground Source

100kW 3p 20 yrs

Solar Thermal Less than 200KW 8.5p 20 yrs

Small Biomass Less than 200kW Tier 17.6p

Tier 21.9p

20 yrs

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Heat Pumps – The “heat pump cycle”

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630kW ASHP Chicken shed installation

• 17,500sqm floor area• 73km of UFH pipe• 280,000 warm chicks

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● Chris Huhne has announced that the UK will reduce Carbon emissions by 50% (from 1990 levels) by 2025.

● One technology alone will not provide the solution. A mixture of required but heat solutions are key – look at the following graph.

Introduction