Economics of Residential Gas Furnaces and Water Heaters in United States New Construction Market

Date Published
10/2009
Publication Type
Report
Authors
LBL Report Number
LBNL-2828E
Abstract

New single-family home construction represents a significant and important market for the introduction of energy-efficient gas-fired space heating and water heating equipment. In the new construction market, the choice of furnace and water heater type is primarily driven by first cost considerations and the availability of power vent and condensing water heaters. Little analysis has been performed to assess the economic impacts of the different combinations of space and water heating equipment. Thus, equipment is often installed without taking into consideration the potential economic and energy savings of installing space and water heating equipment combinations. In this study, we use a life-cycle cost analysis that account for uncertainty and variability of the analysis inputs to assess the economic benefits of gas furnace and water heater design combinations. This study accounts not only for the equipment cost but also the cost of installing, maintaining, repairing and operating the equipment over its lifetime.Overall, this study which is focused on U.S. single-family new construction households that install gas furnaces and storage water heaters, finds that installing a condensing or power vent water heater together with condensing furnace is the most cost-effective option for the majority of these houses. Furthermore, the findings suggest that the new construction residential market could be a target market for the large-scale introduction of a combination of condensing or power vent water heaters with condensing furnaces.

Notes

Journal, Energy Efficiency, September 2010. Volume 3, Number 3, 203-222

Year of Publication
2009
Institution
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
City
Berkeley
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