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Read the latest home news and blogs surrounding building energy management systems and saving on your bills with HeatingSave.


Reduce energy costs now with intelligent computerised boiler control

Energy secretary Chris Huhne has given his backing for proposals to simplify electricity and gas tariffs. "Consumers deserve the best possible deal, which means rough and tough competition in the marketplace," he said. The ‘Big Six’ suppliers in Britain have been ordered to reform their pricing and stop confusing customers, or face a formal referral to the Competition Commission. The firms have just two months to accept wide-ranging reforms, said regulator Ofgem.

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Improve household energy efficiency by one third using temperature sensor system

A scheme has been reintroduced which can help households struggling to pay their energy bills. The Warm Front scheme has reopened for applications, and this provides heating and insulation home improvements for England's poorest families and most inefficient homes. Among the heat-saving measures are loft and cavity wall insulation, and draught proofing. It is hoped that the scheme will help more than 90,000 households by offering heating upgrades worth up to £3,500.

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Advanced planning of heating patterns via PC software cuts carbon emissions of a building

The cold spell over the winter led to a total rise in greenhouse gases in the UK in 2010. Figures releases by the Department of Energy and Climate Change showed carbon dioxide, which accounts for about 84 per cent of UK emissions, was up 3.8 per cent. Carbon dioxide emissions from homes, which relate only to heating and cooking with gas, rose by 13.4 per cent in 2010 due to shivering households turning up the heating.

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Royal Wedding watchers can improve boiler efficiency with temperature compensation control

National Grid, which supplies the nation’s power, estimated that the country used far less energy watching the Royal Wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton than it did during Prince Charles's marriage to Diana Spencer in 1981. The Grid said less energy is used than on a typical May bank holiday as the nation is sat by television sets, instead of more energy-intensive activities like turning on washing machines, toasters and kettles.

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How to save on high oil bills with controller that learns heat loss profile of buildings

High oil prices could stall the global economic recovery and "sow the seeds of their own destruction". That is the view of the International Energy Agency (IEA) which says global oil demand this year is set to be lower than a previous forecast. Higher oil prices were among the cause of the body’s revision. "Persistently high prices at this stage of the economic cycle may ultimately sow the seeds of their own destruction," the IEA said.

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Intelligent money saving boiler management system an alternative to turning off the heating

About 25 per cent of households are predicted to turn off their heating at some point next winter in order to save money on rising heating bills, says a price comparison website. Uswitch stated that in January a survey of nearly 1,600 of its customers had indicated that 20% of them had turned their heating off regularly in order to save money. Furthermore, the group predicts that with fuel tariffs expected to rise, the number will be higher this year.

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Use heating control occupancy sensors to make a home more energy efficient

To support the construction industry, energy secretary Chris Huhne said that government policy will stop any ‘cowboy’ installers taking on jobs under the Green Deal, with registered tradespeople being given a quality mark to put customers’ minds at rest. The Energy Bill was introduced to Parliament last year and includes provision for a new Green Deal which the Government believes will revolutionise the energy efficiency of British properties.

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Boiler control system uses outside temperature compensation to cut rising fuel bills

A minister has urged hard-hit energy customers to “vote with your feet" in the event of high fuel bills. The Bank of England has warned it expects household energy bills to rise by 15 per cent this year. "Consumers don't have to take price increases lying down. If an energy company hits you with a price increase, you can hit them back where it hurts – by shopping around and voting with your feet," Energy Secretary Chris Huhne told the Observer newspaper.

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