boilers
Tackling the elephant in the room with district heating
Paul Sands of Stokvis Energy Systems reflects on the reasons social housing landlords are returning to the use of centralised heating systems.
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015 was the year that our social housing sector ‘rediscovered’ an appetite for district heating after decades of adverse publicity and seemingly cheaper alternatives had persuaded many landlords to
replace the systems; normally with individual gas boilers. There was no single ‘Eureka’ moment but rather a steady stream of
economic and technical reasons which emerged, all of which in some way pointed towards the benefits of district communal heating. The most prominent of these was the launch of the new Code of Practice on Heat Networks by CIBSE, as it set out in detail the way in which such schemes can and should perform, the way they should be designed and the very many different heat sources they can draw on. Even though domestic boilers have improved dramatically in efficiency
and reliability – thanks to condensing technology and much better control systems – for housing associations, they remain the elephant in the room. There is the logistical nightmare of annual gas safety inspections, with a percentage of tenants always reluctant to cooperate with access for the heating engineer. There was also the lifespan of most boiler types which remains around 10 years, making their whole life cost very high. And then there was the announcement by Energy Minister, Amber
Rudd, that the UK Government is committed to ending our reliance on not just gas-fired power stations by 2035, but gas appliances in general. In fact, the country’s energy policy – with carbon reduction targets set in statute – are the most ambitious in the world and will require radical changes in the way we generate and consume heat. Coal fired stations are being shut down, new nuclear plants remain some years away and most of the investment in renewable energy, as supplied through the grid, can best be described as “intermittent”. So we have to find the most efficient means possible of utilising the gas
or other fuel that we do burn: and this can be demonstrated through properly specified district communal schemes either within a block of flats or across larger developments. Buried deep within the CIBSE Code of Practice is guidance on the sizing or capacity of systems. When looking at reasonably well insulated properties, it is the domestic hot water consumption, rather than space heating load which generally dictates the output of stand-alone boilers. Having to consider residents using more than one bathroom simultaneously as a tap is running in the kitchen sees boilers being routinely oversized. However, this tendency can be resisted, or at least mitigated in communal schemes. Specifiers of district heating schemes can not only calculate on a much lower average peak demand when considering 50, 100 or perhaps 500 homes, but they have the option to divide up the load between different technologies. They can meet the base load for a scheme using biomass or a bank of heat pumps; perhaps linked to boreholes or even a water source such as a river. Solar thermal panels could also be linked into this eco-friendly capacity,
able to deal with demand on all but the coldest winter days at which point the system would then switch on a gas fired boiler. Combined heat and power or CHP are also proving popular and a couple of schemes unveiled last year will make use of “waste” heat from incinerators or industry. So, with a highly energy-efficient and hopefully green heat source identified, the other major task is distributing it effectively to residents, which is where HIUs present the ideal answer.
Heat Interface Units facilitate the exchange of energy between the
district heating mains and the individual dwellings normally allowing the domestic consumption to be monitored or metered and isolated when maintenance work is necessary. Crucially, there is no annual gas safety inspection and the HIU can be mounted in a landlord cupboard, accessible from outside the dwelling, and even fitted with a wireless link so that the meter can be read remotely. Changes to benefit payments and funding levels from central
government are putting an increased financial strain on housing associations at a time when the demand for affordable housing is rising rapidly. Taken in tandem with the UK’s looming energy crisis, district heating schemes, featuring high efficiency and easy to manage heat interface units, offer a valuable means of recovering control over stretched budgets.
www.housingmmonline.co.uk | HMM May 2016 | 27
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