We tested our Net Zero home from October 18, 2010 to October 18, 2011. The initial post is here, and these are the questions that we wanted to answer.
The bottom line is that our house did not produce as much energy as it used throughout the course of the year. It was not a net zero energy house during the period indicated. Here are the numbers:
Net energy use: 2518 kWh
We used 2518 kWh more than we produced over the year for all of our energy needs (that's all electricity, as we are not connected to natural gas and we didn't use our wood stove at all).
Total solar production: 7212 kWh
Our solar modules produced at a decent clip, although at slightly lower-than-average levels for Edmonton.
Total energy consumption: 9730 kWh
So what happened? Well, as I said at the outset, we didn't define Net Zero before we started out. Net Zero every year? On a ten year average? What we do know is that this year, we didn't hit our goal.
Here's a bit of post mortem analysis.
- This house is clearly not going to be net zero every year. We missed by a relative long shot. Why?
- It was almost 14% colder than average in the fourth quarter of 2010 (source).
- It was overcast for virtually the entire month of March (as evidenced by my whining in this post). In March of 2010, we didn't heat at all, whereas in March 2011 we heated the house every day.
- Given the year that we had, the HOT 2000 simulation only predicted about half of our heating energy use.
- Given the two points above, I'm confident that our house will be net zero some years. Whether that's 20% of the time or 50%, it's impossible to say right now.
- The average house (built between 1990 - 2003) in Edmonton uses 41,665 kWh for space heating and hot water (or 150 GJ - pdf source) , and another 7800 kWh in general electricity use (pdf source). That's 49,465 kWh in total.
- So, our house used 19.8% of the energy that a newer Edmonton home uses, and it then turned around and produced 75% of that energy as solar electricity.
It was interesting to watch how the house performed this past year. We're still sworn off of the wood stove, so I'll check in again on December 14 and we'll see how close we'll have got to net zero when measuring Dec 14, 2010 - Dec 14, 2011 (after all, if you're not happy with the data, just change the parameters!).
Edit: below are the heating degree numbers for the last 12 months. As you can see, there was a lot more heating required in Edmonton during the last 12 months than during the period of Nov 2009 - Nov 2010. Especially in March!
We tested our Net Zero home from October 18, 2010 to October 18, 2011. The initial post is here, and these are the questions that we wanted to answer.
The bottom line is that our house did not produce as much energy as it used throughout the course of the year. It was not a net zero energy house during the period indicated. Here are the numbers:
Net energy use: 2518 kWh
We used 2518 kWh more than we produced over the year for all of our energy needs (that's all electricity, as we are not connected to natural gas and we didn't use our wood stove at all).
Total solar production: 7212 kWh
Our solar modules produced at a decent clip, although at slightly lower-than-average levels for Edmonton.
Total energy consumption: 9730 kWh
So what happened? Well, as I said at the outset, we didn't define Net Zero before we started out. Net Zero every year? On a ten year average? What we do know is that this year, we didn't hit our goal.
Here's a bit of post mortem analysis.
- This house is clearly not going to be net zero every year. We missed by a relative long shot. Why?
- It was almost 14% colder than average in the fourth quarter of 2010 (source).
- It was overcast for virtually the entire month of March (as evidenced by my whining in this post). In March of 2010, we didn't heat at all, whereas in March 2011 we heated the house every day.
- Given the year that we had, the HOT 2000 simulation only predicted about half of our heating energy use.
- Given the two points above, I'm confident that our house will be net zero some years. Whether that's 20% of the time or 50%, it's impossible to say right now.
- The average house (built between 1990 - 2003) in Edmonton uses 41,665 kWh for space heating and hot water (or 150 GJ - pdf source) , and another 7800 kWh in general electricity use (pdf source). That's 49,465 kWh in total.
- So, our house used 19.8% of the energy that a newer Edmonton home uses, and it then turned around and produced 75% of that energy as solar electricity.
It was interesting to watch how the house performed this past year. We're still sworn off of the wood stove, so I'll check in again on December 14 and we'll see how close we'll have got to net zero when measuring Dec 14, 2010 - Dec 14, 2011 (after all, if you're not happy with the data, just change the parameters!).
(our bidirectional electricity meter – the first reading is how much power we had purchased from Epcor as of October 18, 2011)
(how many kWh we had sold to Epcor as of October 18, 2011)
So on October 18, 2011, our year of monitoring ended. On that day, our meter readings were as follows:
note: these numbers must be compared to the day we started to show the annual values.
- bi-directional power meter (total import and export of electricity for the house):
- import: 12189 kWh
- export: 8447 kWh
- inverters (cumulative production from each of two PV arrays):
- fixed modules: 6335 kWh
- movable modules: 5176 kWh
Wow- thank you Conrad for the honest and frank post. Yes, you may not have had a netzero year this year- but hopefully you may have net positive years, if the weather is good and sunny!
I really, really appreciate your time and effort to keep track of all the numbers and report/blog about it. That deserves an award of some sort! You're helping the rest of us reflect on choices and build better.
Thank you.
My pleasure Shafraaz!
When I get feedback like this, especially from someone such as yourself who is leading the way in Edmonton, it makes it totally worthwhile. **wipes tears from eyes**
Hello Conrad,
We have never met. I work with Shafraaz.
Just curious why you resist heating with the wood stove during cold weather. I have used a Vermont cast iron stove for 7 years and find it a wonderful heat source when the weather is cold (-15 and below). I have access to free wood so that helps.
I now have moved and installed a pellet stove in the basement. It is pretty efficient. It does not produce like the Vermont did but it's pretty good.
Rolly
Thanks for the comment Rolly.
We are really looking forward to using the wood stove (we will be burning free (waste) wood as well).
The problem is that if we had burned wood last year our data would not have been accurate - different pieces of wood have varying amounts of heat energy in them. Plus, we would have had to weigh the wood before burning, and the efficiency of the burn is never 100% accurate.
This way, since we stuck to our electric baseboard heaters alone, we know exactly how much energy our house used.
Conrad
Hi Conrad,
Just a bit of trivia to confirm your dark spring results were not limited to the west. In June, an Environment Canada climatologist stated that, in the Ottawa region, we had 117 fewer hours of sunlight last spring.
Jim
You should be very proud of yourself. You came very close to netzero. With a bit of tweaking, you will make it next year I'm sure. You are a beacon of hope for all who are striving for carbon neutrality. Excellent work.
Conrad,
I am very interested in following your posts. I am glad that you showed all the "real" data and how much you actually consumed and produced. You should be very proud of your efforts particularly in Edmonton!!! You are comparing your 1 year result to the average Edmonton home and are still a fraction of the total energy consumption and no natural gas or other carbon sourced power. I would be interested to see how much less energy you used last year compared to an "average" house in the city as it was colder for everyone. 19.8% of an average house and 75% of that was free solar power. That is truly amazing in Canada as we are always told its different here.
Keep posting!!!
Thanks!
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