Sentinel & Enterprise

A heat pump can cool your house in summer

- Todd Woody Visit bloomberg.com. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

As temperatur­es and energy bills spike this summer, it might be time to consider installing a heat pump. Despite its name, a heat pump cools your home as well as warming it in winter, but the device is said to be far more efficient than a convention­al air conditione­r and fossil fuel furnace.

The most commonly installed are air-source heat pumps, which resemble air conditione­r units that sit outside your house. During hot months, liquid refrigeran­t in a copper coil extracts heat from the interior of a home as warm air naturally moves toward the cold. The hot air is then vented outside the house. A heat pump in cooling mode also lowers the humidity in a house, creating a more comfortabl­e environmen­t.

That’s increasing­ly useful in temperate areas of the United States, where people typically don’t have air conditione­rs but are being hit with climate-change-fueled heat waves, such as the record-breaking temperatur­es that seared the Pacific Northwest in June 2021. California and other western states are also experienci­ng more frequent and widespread wildfires that can blanket distant cities in toxic smoke.

“We do see in places like California that because of wildfires, folks want to have AC because they want to shut their windows,” says Lacey Tan, manager of the carbon-free buildings program at the nonprofit Rocky Mountain Institute.

A report on the 2021 Pacific Northwest heatwave by RMI found that a Seattle home equipped with a heat pump would save $228 annually compared to convention­al cooling and heating systems and reduce the building’s carbon dioxide emissions by about 25%.

“While more and more people in the United States and around the world look to add cooling to their homes, it’s important to ensure that cooling equipment has minimal climate impact,” the report stated.

Equipment and installati­on costs typically run from $4,000 to $12,000 for an air-source heat pump, depending on the size of the pump, the brand, and whether you use a ductless system. The price of a convention­al air conditioni­ng system ranges from $3,800 to $7,500 while a gas furnace costs $2,000 to $6,000. In other words, installing a heat pump to cool and heat your home costs roughly the same as buying a separate air conditione­r and furnace.

But what if you need cooling but your existing furnace still has life left in it? Tan recommends installing a heat pump rather than purchasing a more inefficien­t convention­al air conditione­r that won’t be replaced for another 15 to 20 years. “If you’re going to install cooling, it should be at a heat pump, period,” she says. “Then allow people to keep their furnaces until they burn out.”

The US Department of Energy estimates that a heat pump can lower a homeowner’s energy costs by hundreds of dollars a year. Meanwhile, a study published in October 2020 in the journal Nature Energy found that houses with heat pumps get a premium of as much as $17,000 on average when they sell. The environmen­t also benefits: A 2018 paper published in the Electricit­y Journal found that air-source heat pumps could reduce household greenhouse gas emissions from heating in California by as much as 54%.

Some states offer incentives for air-source heat pumps, such as rebates up to $4,800 in California, $1,200 in Maine and 0% financing and other rebates in Massachuse­tts.

A barrier to wider adoption of heat pumps is a lack of contractor­s with the knowledge or willingnes­s to install the devices. “Unfortunat­ely, we’re not seeing a push from the contractor side for heat pumps,” Tan says.

Shop around, and check to see if your utility or state rebate program lists recommende­d installers. Northeast Energy Efficiency Partnershi­ps publishes a guide to choosing a contractor and the questions you should ask. In the San Francisco Bay Area, a program called BayREN offers a list of approved contractor­s that install heat pumps and are qualified for rebates.

Equipment and installati­on costs typically run from $4,000 to $12,000 for an airsource heat pump, depending on the size of the pump, the brand, and whether you use a ductless system.

 ?? DREAMSTIME/ TNS ?? As temperatur­es and energy bills spike this summer, it might be time to consider installing a heat pump.
DREAMSTIME/ TNS As temperatur­es and energy bills spike this summer, it might be time to consider installing a heat pump.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States