
What is a heat pump: A heat pump is a piece of electrical kit that works like an air conditioning unit in reverse? Instead of sucking heat from a home and dumping it outside, a heat pump drags residual heat from the ground, the air or a water source and concentrates it to warm the house.
Heat pumps are currently used in a few hundred thousand of the UK’s homes, and they’re largely unknown to the public. Yet the climate committee thinks they will be warming most of our houses in decades to come.
What is the benefit of having a heat pump? Heat pumps do in fact save you money on energy costs. … This means lower electricity bills for a comfortable home – heat pumps are very inexpensive to run, but can be expensive to install initially.
Do heat pumps use a lot of electricity?
Like your refrigerator, heat pumps use electricity to move heat from a cool space to a warm space, making the cool space cooler and the warm space warmer. … Today’s heat pump can reduce your electricity use for heating by approximately 50% compared to electric resistance heating such as furnaces and baseboard heaters.
The Government’s Green Home Grant scheme will fund up to two-thirds of the cost of home improvements, installing heat pumps, insulation draught proofing and more to help households cut energy bills. For more details https://ghs.me.uk/green-homes-grant/

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