It seems today’s home owners and
home builders would rather bury their heads in the sand than work at
envisioning the future. Conventional, contemporary home building technology has
been developed in a situation when energy for home heating was cheap. It still
is cheap – but for how long?
As we make decisions about the
houses we build today, we ought to be making our best guess as to what energy
will cost twenty or thirty years from now, and build accordingly. But we don’t.
We go to default mode, and expect implicitly that energy prices in the future
will not change significantly. We all know that’s absurd, but we do it anyway.
In reality, humans are remarkably uncomfortable with forward thinking.
These were the thoughts going
through my mind at the information event Solar in the Southeast last
Thursday evening. The South Eastman Transition Initiative had organized the
event. Three southeast homeowners shared their experience with building and
living in energy efficient homes. Listening to these homeowners, there was
little doubt that they, at least, are convinced that most of us are headlong
into a herd mentality.
An annual heating bill of $800 or $1,000 is acceptable today for most homeowners. But energy prices will go up! Then what?
An annual heating bill of $800 or $1,000 is acceptable today for most homeowners. But energy prices will go up! Then what?
Today it is practical and cost effective to build a house that can be heated for $100 annually. In
Donald and Randy Proven are strong advocates of energy efficient home construction. They have concentrated on infill housing. They have done both, built new houses as well as retrofitted old, drafty houses. Where standard construction today expects walls with R20 insulation, they strive for R60. Where many houses today have 6 air changes per hour, they strive for 0.6. Most of the heating their houses need comes from solar, but when the sun don’t shine, they do use electric heat.
Kyle Friesen, who lives near Mitchell, has put a large solar array on the roof of his house. The array is hooked into Manitoba Hydro. When Kyle’s array generates more electricity than his household uses, Hydro buys his surplus. When the sun don’t shine, Hydro makes up the difference. Manitoba Hydro does not pay much, so this is not a great money maker, nevertheless Kyle expects to recover his investment over the long haul. Kyle admits, “If I had invested this money in the Alberta Oil Sands, I would be getting a better return on investment, but” he adds, “an investment in the oil sands is not an investment in the future.”
Herman Unrau of St. Malo has had vacuum evacuated tubes on his roof for three years. He continues to be very happy with them.
If energy efficient housing
interests you, there is more information on our web site
southeasttransiton.com.
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