Solar hot water in Australia
Solar hot water is water heated using only natural energy from the Sun. Solar energy heats up large panels called thermal collectors commonly known as solar panels. The energy is transferred through a fluid (often water) to a reservoir tank for storage and subsequent use. It is then used to heat water for commercial or domestic use and also as an energy input for heating and cooling devices and for industrial 'process heat' applications.
Solar hot water systems are motivated by the desire to reduce energy consumption more specifically, to reduce a significant source of greenhouse gas and carbon emissions. In the case of Victoria, for example, converting from electric to solar hot water could save 20% of the state's total greenhouse gas emissions.[1]
Despite an excellent solar resource, the penetration of solar water heaters in the Australian domestic market is only about 4% or 5%, with new dwellings accounting for most sales.[2][3]
During the 1950s, Australia’s Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) carried out world leading research into flat plate solar water heaters.[4] A solar water heater manufacturing industry was subsequently established in Australia and a large proportion of the manufactured product was exported. Four of the original companies are still in business and the manufacturing base has now expanded to 24 companies.
Water heating is the largest single source of greenhouse gas emissions from the average Australian home, accounting for around 28 per cent of home energy use (excluding the family car). The Australian government estimates that installing a climate friendly solar powered hot water system can save a family $300 to $700 off electricity bills each year.[5]
Australian government's solar hot water rebate program
The solar hot water rebate program[6] for financial year 2009 offered a $1600 rebate for the installation of solar powered hot water systems.
The rebate can be collected once the installation has been finished, if the household meets the necessary requirements stated below.
- The solar hot water system is a substitute for a previous electric heating system
- The application and the installation process has taken place within the dates the rebate is offered
- The household is a principal place of residence
- The solar or heat pump hot water system is eligible for minimum 20 Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs)
- A licensed plumber or electrician is consulted for the installation
Once the system is installed, the applicant has up to six months to submit the application form with the purchase receipt attached to it.
The mandatory renewable energy target[7] scheme was created by the Australian government to mandate energy retailers to the usage of renewables. Each solar heating system is accredited a certain number of RECs depending on how effective it is and in which of the four climate zones[8] one resides. Each zone is associated with a number of post codes ranging across the whole continent.
Once issued, the RECs can be sold to energy retailers. While the market value of RECs is subject to variation even residential sized installations, depending on the current market conditions and the performance of the installed unit, often amounts to payments of a $900 or more.[9]
Solar hot water in the Australian states
ACT
The ACT Energy Wise program,[10] The Act energy wise program</ref> run by the ACT Government, offers rebates to houseowners or tenants that do energy saving improvements for at least $2000 to their residence. This includes everything from insulation, inserting double glazed windows to the installation of solar, gas or electric heat pump water heating systems.
Only the first $1000 of the cost of the installation of the water heating system (which replaces the existing electric heating system) can be used to calculate the $2000 to be used on improvements. This means that to receive the rebate, the householder needs to spend another $1000 on additional energy savings. Read the terms and conditions very carefully, making sure that the system you are installing is eligible for the rebate. Please see Home Energy Audit Terms and Conditions.[10]
In addition, to be eligible the rebate of $500 the householder/tenant must:
- Have an energy audit by HEAT ($30) (Ph 02 6260 6165 or email: info@heat.net.au).
- Be able to give detailed information about the residence's energy usage during the past year.
- Be able to show receipts from the renovations and improvements made.
- Lodge the application with attached receipts within six months after the energy audit.
- Not have received any other rebate under another program.
New South Wales
The NSW Residential rebate program,[11] running from 01/10 2007 to 30/06 2009, offered all house owners in NSW a rebate on systems that were replacing existing electric hot water systems.
The more efficient the system (emitting less Greenhouse gas), the more RECs the system was eligible for, generating a higher rebate.
Solar or heat pump hot water system, eligible for: | Rebate in $ |
---|---|
20-27 RECs | 600 |
28-35 RECs | 800 |
36-43 RECs | 1000 |
44< RECs | 1200 |
5-star< gas hot water system | 300 |
Northern Territory
Power and Water Corporation, the principal water and electricity supplier in the Northern Territory, offers an REC buyback scheme on installations of solar water heaters.[12] The buyback must be applied for and assigned less than one year after the installation.[12]
Queensland
The Queensland Government's solar hot water rebate scheme finished on 30 June 2005.[13]
No state rebates are offered at the present, however the Queensland government in 2007 announced the phasing-out of electric hot water systems commencing in 2010.[14] From 2010, Queenslanders who needed to replace their household hot water system due to breakdown were no longer able to install electric systems and instead had to choose from gas, solar or heat pump options. Prior to this, the Queensland government had already banned the installation of electric hot water systems in newly constructed houses; a law which came into effect on 1 March 2006. The ban on electric hot water systems was repealed on 1 January 2013 and currently Queenslanders are permitted to install electric hot water systems.[15]
The Brisbane City Council offered a rebate of $400 from 30 August 2008 to 1 June 2009.
South Australia
In accordance with the South Australian Government rebate scheme,[16] starting 2008-07-01, anyone who is installing or replacing a water heater must install a low-greenhouse one.[17] The rebate scheme is aiming towards giving less fortunate people a financial incentive to the use of gas, heat pump or solar energy to heat water.
To be eligible for the $500[16] rebate, the householder has to hold at least one of the following concession cards:
- Centrelink Health Care Card
- Centrelink Pensioner Concession Card
- DVA Gold Card – Totally and Permanently Incapacitated
- DVA Gold Card - War Widow
- DVA - Extreme Disablement Adjustment
Following to the installation, the householder has up to three months to send in the application to receive the rebate if the below criteria is met.
The water heating system does not replace existing one:
New system | No natural or LPG gas access | Gas access (natural or LPG) |
---|---|---|
Gas solar | Yes | Yes |
Electric solar or heat pump | Yes | No |
Electric or gas storage/instantaneous | No | No |
The water heating system does replace existing one:
New system | Gas | Solar gas | Electric element/solar, heat pump | Other types (oil, combustion…) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gas solar | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Electric solar or heat pump | No | No | Yes | Yes |
Electric or gas storage/instantaneous | No | No | No | No |
Tasmania
No rebates other than the Federal Government's are offered by the Tasmanian Government at the moment.
Victoria
Sustainability Victoria’s solar hot water program,[18] sponsored by the Victorian government, offers rebates to householders who have installed a system abides that the following criteria:
- Acts as a replacement of a natural gas or LPG water heater with a gas-boosted solar-system
- Is a solar driven pre-heater, which is additional to an existing natural gas of LPG water heating system
- Is a retrofit kit, which is additional to an existing electric water heater
New houses and buildings can get a rebate by selling the RECs their system is eligible. The Commonwealth government is also offering a $1000 rebate to the replacement of electric water heating.
Residential and community buildings:
Installation situation | VIC gov rebate $480–1500 | Commonwealth Gov rebate $1000 | RECs eligible |
---|---|---|---|
Replacing natural gas or LPG WH w/ gas-boosted solar system | Yes | No | Yes |
Installing SWH as preheater to an existing natural gas or LPG WH | Yes | No | No |
Adding solar panels to an existing off-peak electric WH either with a pump or by thermosiphon as a retrofit kit | Yes | No | No |
Replacing a wood or briquette WH w/ gas-boosted or electric solar system | Yes | No | Yes |
Replacing an electric WH w/ gas-boosted or electric solar system | No | Yes | Yes |
New homes and buildings installing a gas-boosted or electric solar system | No | No | Yes |
Existing buildings requiring a custom designed system for a large hot water load | Yes | No | No |
Commercial buildings:
Installation situation | VIC gov rebate $480–1500 | Commonwealth Gov rebate $1000 | RECs eligible |
---|---|---|---|
New or existing building installing SHW | No | No | Yes |
Western Australia
By installing an environmentally friendly, gas-boosted solar water heater that replaces a previous water electric heating system, you are eligible of the Government of Western Australia’s rebate.[19]
System | Rebate in $ |
---|---|
Natural gas-boosted solar water heaters | 500 |
Bottled LP gas-boosted solar water heaters used in areas without reticulated gas | 700 |
See also
- Mitigation of global warming in Australia
- Photovoltaic engineering in Australia
- Renewable energy commercialisation in Australia
- Solar Cities in Australia
- Solar power station in Victoria
- Solar power plants in Central Australia
References
- ^ access-date=4 Aug 2008 Archived May 2, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Lovegrove, Keith and Dennis, Mike. Solar thermal energy systems in Australia International Journal of Environmental Studies, Vol. 63, No. 6, December 2006, p. 793. doi:10.1080/00207230601047156.
- ^ Energy use in the Australian residential sector 1986-2020, Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts, 2008
- ^ Solar Hot Water Systems Archived 2011-12-30 at the Wayback Machine, CSIROPedia, 2011
- ^ "Retrieved = 14 December 2008". Environment.gov.au. Archived from the original on 4 May 2009. Retrieved 2 May 2010.
- ^ "Solar hot water rebate program". Environment.gov.au. Archived from the original on 2009-05-04. Retrieved 2010-05-02.
- ^ "The Mandatory renewable energy target". Environment.gov.au. Archived from the original on 2009-05-04. Retrieved 2010-05-02.
- ^ "Hills solar". Hills solar. Archived from the original on March 29, 2010. Retrieved 2010-05-02.
- ^ "Choice". Archived from the original on 2008-06-11. Retrieved 2008-05-30.
- ^ a b "Act Energy Wise. Full terms and conditions" (PDF). web.archive.org. 2008-07-18. Retrieved 2019-09-21.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ "The NSW Residential rebate program". Environment.nsw.gov.au. Archived from the original on 2009-10-12. Retrieved 2010-05-02.
- ^ a b "Small-scale Technology Certificate –SolarWater Heater STC assignment form" (PDF). Power and Water Corporation. 2015. Retrieved 2019-09-21.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Solar Hot Water Rebate Scheme in QLD Archived May 24, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Queensland Government: Replacement of electric hot water systems with greenhouse-friendly systems Archived 2011-07-06 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Hot water system requirements".
- ^ a b South Australian Government rebate scheme
- ^ Water heater installation requirements Archived April 24, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Sustainability Victoria" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2010-05-02.
- ^ Sustainable Energy Development Office Archived July 18, 2008, at the Wayback Machine