In Australia, we have followed the British housing tradition and have really bad insulation too! We are working on fixing it but there is so much to retrofit.
Comment on How to cut your energy bills by 30 per cent with a heat pump
Wanderer@lemm.ee 2 months agoOh yea. I’ve been in houses (outside the UK). Had heat pump water tank and an air to air heating (and ac) system for the house.
I’ve always wondered if you could have an air to water system that fills the tank for the taps and then heats the radiators. But also have supplementary heating air to air. Maybe a big one downstairs in the hallway or in the main room of the house.
But with the UK it always comes back to having the worst insulation in the world. Fix that and we wouldn’t even be discussing heating systems.
Greyghoster@aussie.zone 2 months ago
tal@lemmy.today 2 months ago
Most of the UK has relatively-comfortable temperatures, so the impetus is relatively low.
en.wikipedia.org/…/Climate_of_the_British_Isles
Over here, in the US, the places with the lowest temperature variations are also islands, like Hawaii. Extreme temperature swings happen in places like the Dakotas, far away from the ocean.
You’ve been cursed with fairly comfortable temperatures. :-)
tal@lemmy.today 2 months ago
Oh, and one other factor. I was just reading a paper on British housing policy. I’m not taken with the format – it’s imagining a world where planning restrictions on building new housing were reduced, and talking about the benefits of it – but it does also make a number of good points, including the point that some of it is that the UK hasn’t been building housing at the kind of rate that would probably be ideal for some time. Since newer buildings are better-insulated, that also means that the present stock of buildings tend to be less-well-insulated than would be the case had more construction occurred:
iea.org.uk/…/IEA-Discussion-Paper-123_Home-Win_we…
This is the “the paper is from a potential future looking back at the imaginary past” format talking here.