Cheap heat in New Brunswick:High tech heat pumps and old school firewood offer consumers best price - Action News
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New Brunswick

Cheap heat in New Brunswick:High tech heat pumps and old school firewood offer consumers best price

A growing number of New Brunswick residents have been shifting and supplementing heat sources in their homes for convenience or to save money or both.

High prices for oil trigger hunt for cheaper options

An elderly man leans on a snow shovel in his yard, standing next to an electric heat pump on his home.
Robert Kirkpartick has lived in the same Saint John home for 50 years and before heat pumps came along always heated with oil. He said making the switch has lowered his need for oil from five fill-ups per year to two. (Peter Anawati/CBC News)

Robert Kirkpatrick has lived in the same Saint John home for 50 years and even though it has always had a working oil furnace in the basement, these days he gets most his heat from a mini-split heat pump installed under his front porch.

"It's been great, really' said Kirkpatrick.

"The furnace doesn'tcome on and off like it used to."

According to Kirkpatrick, the heat pump supplies most of the warmth he and his wife need in winter. Better yet, at current prices, itcosts him a quarter of what burning oil would to produce the same amount of heat.

Kirkpatrick is among a growing number of New Brunswick residents who have been shifting and supplementing heat sources in their homes for convenience or to save money, or both.

A series of electric heat pumps installed on the back of a building.
A rarity in New Brunswick a decade ago, mini-split heat pumps have been widely embraced in the province by those looking to save on heating costs. Technological advances allow them to generate multiple times the heat of conventional electric space heaters from the same amount of power. (Robert Jones/CBC News)

In some cases, changes in pricefor fuels over the past year hasbeen altering what the cheapest sources of heat are in New Brunswick and in othercases,the changes have been widening differences between one fuel and another.

For consumers looking to save money, comparing alitre of oil to a stick of hardwood, or to a kilowatt hour of electricity can be tricky. And differences in the efficiencyof heating appliances adds even more uncertainty.

Still, every fuel can be reduced to how many BritishThermal Units (BTUs) it can produce and those are simple enough to compare to each other.

So, given current prices, what's the cheapest way to produce that much heat thismonth inNewBrunswick?

1. HIGH EFFICIENCY MINI SPLIT HEAT PUMP -

Cost to generate 1 million BTUs of heat: $12.09

By far the most popular addition New Brunswick residents have been making in recentyears, like Robert Kirkpatrick, is a mini splitheat pump. Normally, heat pumps cannot entirely provide what a house needs to stay warm but it can displace a large percentage of more expensive heating sources.

According to N.B. Power, current cold weather high efficiency units now on the market have a "heating seasonalperformance factor" (HSPF) of up to 9.6. That means they can produce 9,600 BTUs of heat for every onekilowatt hour of electricity they use,measured over the entire heating season.

At that output, a high efficiency heat pump needs only 104.2 kilowatt hours of electricity to produce 1 million BTUs of heat. At N.B. Power's current residential rate of 11.61 cents per kilowatt hour that would be a total bill of $12.09 plus HST.

Saint John Energy haseven lower residential rates,and the same amount of heat from a high efficiency mini-split within itsboundaries would cost about $11.11.

Lower efficiency heat pumps or units poorly sized for the space they are heating will not be as cost effective. But savings for consumers can be significant ifthe right unit is purchased and properly installed.

A pile of firewood.
Firewood has long been the cheapest form of heat available in New Brunswick for those who don't mind cutting and stacking it. At the right price, it still is for many. (Jean-Sbastien Marier/Radio-Canada)

2. FIREWOOD

Cost to generate 1 million BTUs of heat: $15.63

Firewood is an old school New Brunswick favourite and before heat pump technologyadvanced was the undisputed king of cheap heat in the province for decades.

A legal cord of hardwood is 128 cubic feet and contains an estimated 24 million BTUs of energy. During combustion, modern high efficiency wood stoves can convert about 80 per cent of that into heat in a house.

That means at $300 per cord delivered, heat from hardwood burned in a high quality stove costs about $15.63 per 1 million BTUs.

3. NATURAL GAS -

Cost to generate 1 million BTUs of heat:: $27.48

Like all fossil fuels, the price of natural gas in New Brunswick this winter is higher than last winter but the increases have not been as steep as those suffered by some fuels.

Residential users of natural gas pay three charges including, in January,$12.18 per gigajoule for the gas they consume, $10.42 per gigajoule for transporting that gas through the public distribution system and a flat rate monthly service charge of $21.50.

A gigajoule of natural gas contains just under 948,000 BTUs of energy and a high efficiency natural gas furnace can convert up to 95 per cent of that into home heat. It is difficult to accurately assign the cost of the service charge, but a house that uses 10 gigajoules of gas in a month like January is likely paying an all-in price of about $27.48 per 1 million BTUs.

A pile of wood pellets in the foreground with a burning pellet stove in the background.
Wood pellets are in high demand in Europe this year because of natural gas shortages and have also shot up in price in New Brunswick. The fuel is made locally and despite recent increases still provides cheaper heat than many alternatives like electric baseboard and furnace oil. (Robert Jones/CBC News)

4. PELLET STOVE -

Cost to generate 1 million BTUs of heat:: $28.83

Wood pellets are an increasingly popular source of supplementalheat in New Brunswick but have also been increasingin price. Last week, 40 lbbags of pellets at major retailersintheprovince were selling for $7.38 plus HST. That is about 20 per cent more than last winter.

Each 40 lbbag of pellets contains close to 320,000 BTUs of energy and high efficiency stoves can turn up to 80 per cent of that into space heat. That puts the cost of 1 mllionBTUs at $28.23.

5. STANDARD ELECTRIC BASEBOARD

Cost to generate 1 million BTUs of heat: $34:02

Electric baseboards are the most common source of residential heat in New Brunswick. One kilowatt hour of electricity will produce 3,412 BTUs of heat and so generating 1 million BTUs takes 293 kilowatt hours of power. At current NB Power residential rates of 11.61 cents per kilowatt hour, that is $34.02.

In Saint John where residential rates are lower, the price is $31.26.

Those amounts are the same for electric space heaters and close to the same for electric furnaces, but getting heat from electric floor radiantheating will be more.

According to Efficiency Nova Scotia in-floor electric heat is less efficient than a standard baseboard and adds about 17 per cent to its cost. In N.B. Power's case that puts the price of 1 million BTUs of radiant floor heat at $40.02.

6. FURNACE OIL

Cost to generate 1 million BTUs of heat: $56.16

Furnace oil has had a terrible year for pricing. Last week around New Brunswick, retailers were charging an average price of $1.64 per litre plus HST for a delivery. That's down nearly 80 cents from peak prices in early November, but it is still almost double what consumers were paying two winters ago.

There are about 36,500 BTUs in one litre of oil and although modern furnaces can convert up to 95 per cent of that into heat, most furnaces in New Brunswick are older and considerablyless efficient.

At an 80 per cent conversion rate of energy into heat, it takes 34.2 litres of oil to move 1 million BTUs of heat into a house. Even with recent price reductions, that is still $56.16. It is almost double the cost of pellet stove heat and more than four times as expensive as heatsupplied from anelectric heat pump.

A large white propane tank sides at the back of a red bungalo in Mount Pearl.
Estimating the comparative price of propane heat is a bit more difficult for many reasons, including the cost to rent propane tanks. (Heather Gillis/CBC)

7. PROPANE FIREPLACE

Cost to generate 1 million BTUs of heat: $57.26

Propane is difficult to price accurately for a comparison to otherfuels. Last week, New Brunswick retailers were allowed to sell for 97.4 cents plus HST but may or may not offer prices below that depending on the customer.

A second issue with propane is that most customers have to rent a tank from the company, adding an extra $9 or $10 per month to the energy bill.

A litre of propane contains less energy than furnace oil, about 24,300 BTUs. When used in a fireplace, about 70 per cent ends up as usableheat. That requires 58.8 litres.

At fully-allowed New Brunswick prices, that means 1 million BTUsof heat from a propane fireplace will cost $57.26.

The amount can be considerably less than that depending on prices charged by individual retailers. It can also be less if the fuel is used in a more efficient appliance, like a propane furnace.