Dan Green
Water Source Heating & Cooling
Eau Claire, Wisconsin
Geothermal Heat Pumps
A 3,000-plus-square-foot ranch house, with 1,800 square feet of finished space, was converted from an oil-based heating and cooling system to a geothermal system.
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"We were asked to install a GHP system in a house in Alma Center, Wisconsin, where the homeowner had been using around 1,500 gallons a year of fuel oil for heating," says Green. "At current market prices, that puts the HVAC operating costs at about $3,700 a year. That's pretty expensive for anyone, especially an older woman on a fixed income. We had installed a geothermal heat pump in her daughter's home a couple years ago. Because of the savings, she wanted us to look at installing GHP in her mother's house."
"Most of our work comes through word-of-mouth and referrals, especially once customers start seeing big savings in their energy bills. Word spreads fast when that happens."
"We have been working with certain builders who have been putting geothermal in homes for years. After they started seeing how happy their customers ended up, they now offer it in all their homes. Plus, it really allows the builders to set themselves apart from their competitors."
"In the previous winter, the mother had paid about $2.50 a gallon for fuel oil. She's now saving over $3,000 a year, which means the entire system can be paid for with less than five years of energy savings. The net operating cost of the geothermal heat pump is about six to eight times cheaper than a conventional HVAC, which is about $500 per year. The client now only burns about 50 gallons a year in oil as a backup system during extreme temperatures."
"The project, ground loops included, cost her about $14,000. Right away, people always say it's too much money. But, when you explain how the system works, how much money clients save on their energy bills, and that these systems--particularly the expensive loops--last a long time, people start to come around. Geothermal loops can last hundreds of years."
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