Ground Source
Heat Pumps
Enjoy constant heat and hot water without worrying about large energy bills. You can save money with a ground source heating system that uses a renewable energy source.
Using the Earth’s constant temperature as an energy source, building energy consumption and associated emissions can be reduced by more than 40% when compared with air source heat pumps and by over 70% when compared with electric resistance heating and standard air conditioning.
How do Ground Source Systems Work?
The earth is a huge solar collector, absorbing 47% of the sun’s energy, more than 500 times more energy than mankind needs, every year, in the form of clean renewable energy.
Using conventional heat pump technology and a ground loop heat exchanger, low grade heat is drawn from the earth and transferred to a fluid inside the ground loop, buried underground. The fluid then travels along the loop to the heat pump through a compressor where the temperature is raised to provide heating and hot water. For cooling the process is reversed with heat being rejected back into the earth.
A Renewable Energy Source
Ground source energy is a renewable resource. In the heating cycle, a ground source system will move at least 3 kW of energy from the ground for each 1 kW of electricity used by the heat pump. In the reverse cycle the same heat exchanger rejects excess heat to the earth at similar returns.
Benefits of Ground Source Heat Energy
- Lowers your fuel bills and saves you money.
- Reduces building energy consumption.
- Reduces your home or business carbon emissions.
- Provides a clean source of heating and hot water to homes and buildings.
- Addresses fuel poverty – cutting energy bills.
- Reduces carbon emissions contributing to Carbon Zero target for 2050.
- Reduces maintenance costs (ground loops require no maintenance).
- Higher Coefficient of Performance (COP) than air source equipment due to the constant ground temperature.
- No requirement for on-site fossil fuel consumption.
- May provide income from the government backed RHI Scheme.