Doesn't your very own personal power plant sound a little bit like a dream come true? You wouldn't have to worry about power-outages and you'd have direct control over your home's juice. But, you're an EcoGeek, so you're unsure about it, wouldn't your own power plant be overkill? Well, not necessarily, and these distrubuted power solutions are likely an important step in the future of green energy.
There are already thousands of homes in Japan using these systems, called micro-CHPs (combined heat and power). Micro-CHP systems use natural gas generators to produce electricity for homes. The heat from the electrical generator is then used either to create hot water or hot air, which is then used to heat the home. Because of this combined efficiency, a micro-CHP is 3 times more efficient than electricity delivered over the grid. And, as an added benefit, a micro-CHP can serve as a backup generator in the event of a power outage. At night, if you don't need all the power it's producing, you can actually sell the excess back to the power company.
Micro-CHP units aren't inexpensive. The CS Monitor article notes that even a basic system is at least $6000 more than a new high-efficiency gas forced-air furnace. And they still rely on natural gas as a fuel. They may pay back their investment more quickly if electricity prices go up rapidly. But, at the same time, they could become expensive to operate if natural gas prices spike.
The micro-CHP is not permanently sustainable, unlike systems like wind or solar. But it is a much more efficient method of addressing the energy needs of a home.
articles: Christian Science Monitor, CNet News

written by James S., February 07, 2007
written by Janis Mara, February 09, 2007
That's a very good question. I guess the big question is, "What is a significant number?" I know in California we have a Million Solar Roofs initiative that targets that number as making a significant impact, but I don't know what critical mass would be. Experts?
written by Philip Proefrock, February 09, 2007
It also depends on the net metering schemes your local government and utility employ. In my home state (Michigan), net metering cannot result in an annual surplus of electricity produced, or the credit for the overage is simply returned to the utility.
written by Derek Williamson, February 13, 2007
In Australia significant subsidies are required for renewable and alternative energy systems because the govt will not put these pricing schedules in place because they are afraid of hurting business in the short term.
As some one once said politics is too short sighted to combat issues like sustainability which stretch many years into the future.
written by James, February 27, 2007
written by Tom Murray, June 29, 2007
New technology can help, as long as it does,t cost a fortune and in a new build programme, its all so much easier to install from a standing start, rather than expensive retro fitting.
written by eric ziemba, July 29, 2007
written by nikhil, August 31, 2009
written by ndtreviv, October 28, 2009
Now, however, everyone has their own computer. Instead of sending processing off to a central mainframe, they do it locally, at their own desk.
I totally believe this is the future of power generation. I reckon that one day there will be no large power stations, requiring non-renewable sources of fuel, but each community will have their own individual power station running off renewable sources of energy. Maybe even every house will have their own generation system. Someone one day is going to develop a high-performance low-cost east to install and manage personal power station "kit" and they'll clean up big time. Bill Gates style. the world is crying out for it - many communities in Africa have NO electricity. Imagine if they were given these "kits". Power problem sorted the world over.
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