shed9
establiSHED member
One major lurking problem with ASHP's is fundamentally linked to the weather we are experiencing right now. According to the weather modelling from the Met Office, moving forward we are highly likely to experience a similar extreme heat wave every five years as opposed to the usual model of one in every 50. As we approach 2050, that will shift towards an extreme summer every other year. Given that an ASHP is essentially an aircon in reverse this cooling operation can currently be accessed on some models of ASHP's and over time will likely be included with most, if not all, models to capture sales as summers like this one become more typical. I know that there are some proposals, even loose legislation to disable this on ASHP's and to some extent that occurs but either manufacturers will push back or modifications will be offered.
Here's the rub; that same modelling of increased risks of extreme summers also predicts wetter but more importantly warmer winters. The shift of ASHP operation has potential to be used during two seasonal weather patterns, not just one. Consumers are lazy and most people will opt to use the aircon mode in summer months as opposed to opening windows which makes aircon less effective anyhow. That 3.6-4.5 Coefficient Of Power (COP) for ASHP is fairly moot in cost savings when the price of electric power increases and usage goes up. Sure there will be people who simply won't or can't afford to run it during summer months but the scale of actual usage is likely to incur issues and create problems we never thought of, how many lost power over the last few days because of National Grid issues?
Here's the rub; that same modelling of increased risks of extreme summers also predicts wetter but more importantly warmer winters. The shift of ASHP operation has potential to be used during two seasonal weather patterns, not just one. Consumers are lazy and most people will opt to use the aircon mode in summer months as opposed to opening windows which makes aircon less effective anyhow. That 3.6-4.5 Coefficient Of Power (COP) for ASHP is fairly moot in cost savings when the price of electric power increases and usage goes up. Sure there will be people who simply won't or can't afford to run it during summer months but the scale of actual usage is likely to incur issues and create problems we never thought of, how many lost power over the last few days because of National Grid issues?