Categories: Solar

Solar hot water giving you cold showers? Eight tips to warm you up

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The Conversation

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In Australian homes, reliable hot water supplies for taking showers or bathing the kids are taken for granted. But this has a significant cost – conventional hot water heaters can account for up to 30% of household energy use and can be significant carbon emitters.
One alternative is solar hot water, which can supply more than 90% of household hot water and reduce energy bills by 50-85%, as well as lowering carbon emissions.
Unfortunately, it is likely that households are not getting the most from their solar hot water systems. In Australia and overseas, there is evidence that the potential of solar hot water is not being realised.
So how can you can get the most out of your solar hot water system?
Missed opportunities to reduce energy use
Solar hot water systems use solar energy to heat water using the familiar roof-mounted solar panels. This water can then be stored in an insulated tank. While these systems can produce up to 90% of a household’s hot water needs, the system may need a boost with gas or electricity when the sun isn’t shining or hot water demand is high.
Moreover, an Australian study highlighted installation problems that led to “zero solar performance” or “dramatic underperformance”.
With this information in mind, and with our research already showing that being green is not always as straightforward as it may seem, we went out and talked to householders about their experience of owning a solar hot water system.
We assessed the efficiency of the systems themselves and found them to be highly variable. But the key thing we found was that people struggled to fit solar heating into household routines. While solar heating is conceptually simple, households often inadvertently heated water with electricity or gas instead of letting the sun do the work.
The task was made more complex by variable weather, electricity tariffs, high hot water demand by teenagers, and deeply ingrained habits. Families treated hot water systems as background “infrastructure” that they expected to deliver hot water regardless of circumstances.
The quality of the actual installations was also variable. Basics, notably pipe insulation, were often lacking or substandard. The most motivated households actively experimented with their solar hot water systems. But, after a few cold showers, significant numbers gave up and relied on mains energy to boost their system.
The result is that the energy and carbon savings potential of solar hot water is not being realised.
Eight tips to get the most from solar hot water
We argue that policy needs to look beyond installation and that installation practices need improving, but what can you do to get an effective installation?
First, seek out independent advice from sources such as local sustainability events and organisations. They can help you understand what suits your circumstances and what characterises an effective installation.
A good organisation is the Alternative Technology Association. They provide free advice to members, sell a solar hot water guide, and organise open house events where you can see and discuss domestic sustainability technologies.
Second, consider whether solar hot water is the best option. It may be that a hot water heat pump or an instant gas system is a suitable choice, depending on where you live, how much cloud cover you have, or what sort of building you are in.
Third, make sure all your hot water pipes are insulated, especially the pipes that go to and from the tank and solar panels. You typically need insulation to be 15 mm thick. Without proper insulation you could lose half the energy you are trying to collect.
Fourth, get a booster switch installed in a convenient place inside, so you can easily turn the booster off if there is plenty of sun, or on if it’s cloudy or you need more hot water.
Fifth, if you go solar, install a system that has a sufficiently large tank matched with a sufficiently large solar array for your needs. Water is very good at storing heat. A large tank could help you store solar energy for those rainy days.
Sixth, you may need to change electricity tariffs if your booster is electric, to ensure the sun gets a chance to heat the water before the electricity does.
Seventh, you may need to change your peak hot water use habits so that the tank water is at its coldest after morning use, after which the sun can then heat it during the day. The booster can “top up” overnight, ready for morning showers.
Eighth, before you install solar hot water, examine and discuss household expectations around hot water use. Will they need to change? Are members of your household prepared to make that change?
This may be the most profound change you can make, but also perhaps the most challenging.

Authors: Nicholas Gill, University of Wollongong; Chris Gibson, University of Wollongong; Gordon Waitt, University of Wollongong; Lesley Head, University of Wollongong, and Peter Osman, CSIRO
Source: The Conversation. Reproduced with permission.

This post was published on September 18, 2015 4:10 am

View Comments

  • Heat pumps are the way to go. Add more panels to your solar electric system and run the heat pump from 11AM -3PM to capture maximum sun and highest ambient air temperature. Sanden offer the best heat pump available as it is the quietest and has the highest COP of any on the market. at about 4.0 75% renewable fraction (energy from the sun stored in the air).

    • There have been big changes in solar water heating over the years. Our first effort in the 1960s was 'home brew' and it worked surprisingly well. We did our first 'commercial' version in the seventies - also very effective. Currently we have the flat plate collectors on the roof, tank on the ground type and it is also a sound performer. Assuming I live long enough, the next one will be a heat pump type - fully renewable energy powered.

  • Have installed thermosiphon system w 320L roof top tank & could not be happier. No moving parts (no pump), & manually flick on electric booster when we decide its needed eg. a run of rainy days.
    NB. You do need roof structure strong enough for 350Kg load. No probs with our old hardwood rafters but some modern rooves are flimsy.
    Best investment ever.

  • I have a bolt on heat pump from Siddons. I have had it for around 3 weeks now and it is great. I can set 2 different timers so it can heat free from my solar through the day then I top it up off peak to keep my wife happy for her morning shower.
    It is one of the cheaper systems I could find as the name suggests its bolts on to your old storage tank and saves you some money by not needing a new tank.
    It also has a power button that is like a boost button and let's you turn it on when out of the preset timers. ( just remember to turn it off again)
    I love it and I love that I now have control over when I run it.

  • Not sure I agree with the idea of using the up hot water by scheduling morning showers, he allowing the resulting cold water in the tank to heat up during the day.
    Where I live (Mount Gambier) we get cold nights and by morning the water in the rooftop tank has cooled down to the point where it's often too cool for a comfortably warm shower.
    So we always have our showers at night, when the water's at its hottest. That way , we rarely have to use the electric boost at all.
    BTW, It makes sense to me to shower at night in any case. I get dirty during the day, but stay clean overnight as I relax in a clean armchair after my shower & sleep in a clean bed!!

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