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Heat Pumps

Buildings and Cities

Heat pumps transfer heat from a cold space to a hot one. Highly efficient, they can dramatically lower building energy use for heating and cooling.

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Rank and results by 2050 #42

Heat Pumps

Reduced CO2: 5 gigatons
Net cost (Billions US$): $118.71
Net operational savings: $1,546.66 billion
What do these numbers mean?

TOTAL CO2-EQ REDUCTION (GT)

Total CO2-equivalent reduction in atmospheric greenhouse gases by 2050 (gigatons)

NET COST (billions US $)

Net cost to implement

SAVINGS (billions US $)

Net savings by 2050

Impact:

Heating and cooling of residential and commercial building space requires more than 13,000 terawatt-hours of energy and is estimated to increase to more than 18,000 terawatt-hours by 2050. This energy use comes from on-site fuel combustion and electricity-based systems — from gas furnaces to air-conditioning units. High-efficiency heat pumps reduce fuel consumption to zero and use less electricity to generate heating and cooling. Current adoption is low at .02 percent of the market, but we estimate rapid growth as costs continue to decrease by up to 25 percent by 2050. For a cost of $119 billion in addition what would be spent on conventional technologies, operating savings could reach $1.5 trillion over three decades and $3.5 trillion over the technology’s lifetime. Emissions reductions in this scenario come to 5.2 gigatons of carbon dioxide.

Vs

Water Saving – Home

Materials

Cleaning, transporting, and heating water requires energy. More efficient fixtures and appliances can reduce home water use by 45 percent, thereby reducing emissions.

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Rank and results by 2050 #46

Water Saving – Home

Reduced CO2: 5 gigatons
Net cost (Billions US$): $72.44
Net operational savings: $1,800.12 billion
What do these numbers mean?

TOTAL CO2-EQ REDUCTION (GT)

Total CO2-equivalent reduction in atmospheric greenhouse gases by 2050 (gigatons)

NET COST (billions US $)

Net cost to implement

SAVINGS (billions US $)

Net savings by 2050

Impact:

Ninety-five percent adoption of low-flow taps and showerheads by 2050 could reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 4.6 gigatons, by reducing energy consumption for heating wasted water. Scaling other water-saving technologies would drive additional reductions. We model hot water only in order to calculate energy savings.

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