Can Any Home Use Solar Energy Prices In Order To Aid A Home Owner To Make Savings Year On Year?

June 12, 2011 by admin  
Filed under Energy Efficiency

To be able to provide their specified output, Solar Energy Prices, in a domestic environment, normally need to be mounted onto a south, or near south facing roof, although they can be mounted on poles. Also, even if a house does have a south facing roof, if that is then near to tall buildings or trees that put the Solar Energy Prices into shadow and so downgrade their provision capacity, then this can render the house unsuitable. There may also be difficulties in blocks of flats, since by default the roof is not owned by any tenants and so the landlord would need to approve any plans for Solar Energy Prices, making this a difficult Solar Energy Prices system. Even where a house has an open south facing roof, the roof structure itself must be strong enough to take the weight of the Solar Energy Prices system, so any extra work needed would add to the Solar Energy Prices.

The Solar Energy Prices for a normal domestic Solar Energy Prices system are in the region of £12,000, which gets them a 2.2 kW Solar Energy Prices system, that is expected to be sufficient to provide in the region of 40% of the normal family’s power consumption over a year. While the house may be capable of supporting the Solar Energy Prices system, the customer must be happy that the decision pay the Solar Energy Prices is the right one. They should not seek out short term gains because the Solar Energy Prices system mentioned is assumed to be able to provide savings of in the region of £900+ per year, which gives a payback period of 12 to 13 years for the Solar Energy Prices paid.

So in order to have a profitable Solar Energy Prices system, the customer must be happy to pay the Solar Energy Prices in the first place, then the check of the house must find that the house itself is up to the job of housing the Solar Energy Prices in a place where their supplying capacity can be maximised. Only then will the customer feel that they are making a positive statement in support of the environment and are also using less power from the national grid, which works out to in the region of 1 tonne of CO2 per year.

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