“Actually, you only need every second heating system.”
Basel, a neighbourhood from the 1930s characterised by terraced houses filled with the charm of yesteryear and the lives of their current residents. This is where Dominik Born lives. He is an Innovations Manager at IWB and spent seven years wondering why heating systems were not interconnected. Heatpooling instead of carpooling. Together with both of his neighbours, he has now started a nano-cooperative pilot project. “Actually, you only need every second heating system,” says Dominik with a provocative wink. The pilot project in his home proves it: during the previous winter, his geothermal heat pump also provided heat for both his neighbours’ homes. They saved around 15% of the costs during the first winter, using 90% renewable energy; the neighbours’ natural gas-fired heating systems supplied merely the remaining 10% of the energy required, which covered domestic hot water only.
Optimal use thanks to the nano-cooperative
The idea itself suggests that the Born family's heat pump system is oversized. But closer inspection revealed why Born was able to used his heat pump to heat three residential units instead of one: a heating system guarantees that requisite heating energy will be provided up to a certain temperature point. The size of Dominik’s Optiheat geothermal heat pump from CTA means that, at an ambient temperature as low as -8 degrees Celsius, it can provide enough power to make the house nice and cosy. You can count on one hand the number of days that it gets that cold in Basel, and this is where the nano-cooperative comes into its own: what the heat pump can do, it now does as well. Instead of fossil fuels, geothermal energy is now used to heat the neighbouring houses as well as his own.