jansman wrote: ↑Tue Aug 01, 2023 4:02 pm
I asked the question,as it will be a big deal when electricity takes over and there’s no gas in the future. Electricity is currently dearer than gas,and I have no doubt that in the future it will remain that way! Current precise price details are irrelevant- electricity ain’t cheap. And that’s now!
Right now,gas is the number one fuel . Back in the day ,before North Sea gas ,central heating was not common. Yes, there were electric heaters etc. but the majority was coal fires! Then gas came in and central heating became common- but that’s only about 50 years- no more!
Another issue is how houses have been designed. Back in the old days most houses had rooms with doors to keep heat in. Now many are open plan with almost Mediterranean tiled flooring,and people walk around dressed as though they are by the swimming pools- in January with the central heating on full bore!
Could you adapt quickly to electric heating!
My house is Victorian, with the original walls and doors. As I say, I sometimes have the c/h off, and an electric rad in my room. It's very good, and fairly cheap. If I use it for a few hours, the electricity used that day doesn't jump up noticeably. On days I used it I still only used about 6.5 kWh, same as normal. However I reckon if I had one in say 3 rooms plus living room (I have 2 lodgers) it would start to add up and be dearer than the c/h. It is 700w and if I set it to about 35%, it runs for about 20 minutes per hour, so it uses just over 200w per hour, ie 1 kW in 5 hours.
Push comes to shove and the government does nothing, I'll have to try to insulate the house better. But that is almost impossible as my external walls are in my room, two lodgers rooms, bathroom, kitchen etc. I could do the front door, but it will be expensive and sad to get rid of the original. There is original cornice on the ceiling. The door has stained glass, and a glass window above. It would cost £ thousands. Maybe I could put a heavy curtain over it. I did have one once, but it kept jamming on its pole so I got rid of it. It's not even cold in the hall, the hall radiator rarely comes on, and I have a thermometer on the landing. The coldest rooms are one lodger's, and the prep room, but that is barely heated. The only thing I could do in my lodger's room is put a new window in.
In my room, the window has draught excluder strips fitted. In the winter I shut it, pull gown the blind, close the curtains, tuck the bottom of them onto the window ledge, seal any gaps with microfibe cloths, and leave it 'til the spring. So my window is kind of insulated. Maybe I could put bubble wrap on the glass, or temporary secondary glazing using acrylic sheet and magnetic tape.