Getting off the grid is a direction, and it does not have to be an absolute destination, not everybody can have a net zero house, particularly on a retrofit basis, but the goal is to spring free of the trap of burning fossil fuel, and paying for energy ad infinitum on a subscription basis. That slavery is symbolized financially by the fact that if you start making your fossil fuel-based (subscription) energy household more efficient, you are in effect ensuring that the value of your property remains dependent on fossil fuel - you never get out of the hole. With every dollar you invest, you are making it harder to switch to renewable energy. Effectively, you are cementing your dependence on the fossil fuel system, and its predictably unpredictable price hikes, with every dollar you "invest," and the long-term value of your property remains hostage to external fuel supplies and pricing. Therefore, as long as there is a renewable energy alternative, that should have top priority. Off-Grid Real Estate is easier if you build it from scratch, but on a retrofit basis, the design objective becomes simply making a long-term green energy plan, based on a proper financial model of your property, and planning your investments in such a way that you gradually slip out of the noose of carbon energy and build up the long-term value of what is for most people their major asset in life, their house. Your journey to net zero has begun. The design goal here should be anything over 50% energy reduction, which cannot usually be done with energy efficiency.
The energy efficiency trap and the green energy answer
Prioritizing energy efficiency projects is a trap, because of diminishing returns. Salesmen for various energy efficiency technologies, or even for renewables, will try to sell you their equipment on the basis of a payback period, never mind if it makes sense for the value of your home. They come waving Energy Star labels and tax incentives or other programs in your face, but their interest is selling their wares, not increasing the value of your property. That part is your responsibility. The first "efficiency" investment may be $3,000 with a 3 year payback, and you think great, this reduces my energy bills by 15%, fantastic. Then the next best opportunity is $10K with a 6 year payback, based on another 15% reduction. By this time your bills are 85% of what they were, so now your overall reduction is another 13% off the original at best. And the next investment you can find is another $15K, which would reduce the remaining 72% of your bills by another 10% (or 7% off the original), and the payback now is 15 years, and you judge it not to be worthwhile. So if you're lucky you've reduced your energy bills by 28% until the next price hike, and then you can start all over again. You keep paying your oil bills or your utility bills stay in hock to carbon fuel. This is called diminishing returns, ever bigger investments for ever lower returns. Your goal is walking away from you, and your investment path amounts to capital destruction in terms of the value of your property. There is another dimension to the efficiency trap: The Efficiency Trap: Finding a Better Way to Achieve a Sustainable Energy Future. The perverse side effect is that if a resource becomes more efficient, people use more of it. So again, don't start making a fossil fuel system more efficient, but first pursue green energy alternatives to make your property energy independent. OFF THE GRID: HEAT PUMPS AND OTHER MULTIPLIERS In green energy,
the basic technologies most people are familiar with are wind turbines, solar PV, and solar thermal, but another important technology is heat pumps, starting with geothermal. A good geothermal heat pump may have a Coefficient of Performance of 4.0 (COP), and it could handle HVAC and Domestic hot water pre-heat, and possibly a snow-melt system, or heating your pool water. If you can power it with wind energy or solar PV, you win big, for again it produces four times the heat output of what it uses. If you must use power from the grid, perhaps you can put it on time of use. More and more wind turbines are coming to market which are suitable for mounting on buildings. Other great adjuncts to help you towards net zero, are heat exchange ventilators. The more you can eliminate combustion from your house, the tighter you can make it, and heat exchange ventilation can retain the heat or cooling, and still provide fresh air. Try to eliminate gas or oil from the house entirely, that will allow you to tighten up your building envelope. Cook with electricity, not gas. The old standbys are insulation, windows, roofs, etc. Notice that in the renewable energy model, improvements to the building envelope reduce the installed generating capacity, and tend to reduce your up front capital requirement, while in the carbon energy model they pay for themselves over time from energy savings.
Towards net zero: Breaking dependence on fossil fuel
What matters in a retrofit is that you have a long-term plan, based on a 30 year model of your property, in which you can compare the various options. Net zero does not have to be an absolute goal, but avoid the investment trap of energy efficiency if you can help it at all. If you are methodical about the steps you follow, the payoff will be breaking the 50% barrier of energy reduction and eventually coming closer and closer to net zero, and you are adding to the value of your property as you go along. Most importantly, with a green energy investment plan, you will end up finding synergies and compounding returns, so that two components which might individually seem unattractive, might provide superior returns when put together, such as the heat pump with the wind turbine, etc.
Off the grid by plan, not by accident
When you set up your model, use the original condition as a starting point, and systematically compare an alternative A and B, in which A is the efficiency model, and B is the green energy/net zero model. Use 30 year cash flows, and include maintenance, replacements, fuel costs and so on. Alternative B is the renewable energy model. Try to see if you can eliminate one fuel from your house entirely (oil or gas). In a green energy model this will have a multiplier effect, because you are eliminating a major source of indoor air pollution. Notice that the renewable energy project will be more expensive up front, but the reduction in your energy bills will be far greater, and, you may have serious synergies between different aspects, a heat pump run on the grid may be expensive to run, but run on 70% wind or solar it may be a winner. Synergies like this will move you off the grid gradually and propel you towards net zero. There is a reason utilities and oil companies like you to invest in energy efficiency, and even offer cheap financing and other incentives: they retain you as a customer. Every step towards energy independence increases the value of your home.
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