Simple solar heating makes good economic sense in uncertain times. It can help save the average homeowner 9.45 barrels of oil per year, more than $1,200 at $130 per barrel – enough to pay back the investment in less then two and a half years – and can help reduce the nation’s dependence on foreign oil.
If you install a mid-sized 25-square meter integrated solar hot water and space heating array in New York State for instance, you will collect about 54,812,780 btu per year with a low-cost 80% efficient system costing about $2,900. This will reduce you energy bills for heating and hot water by about 75%.
This may not seem like a lot compared to the energy use of the United States, which was approximately 97 quads, or 100,000,000,000,000,000 British Thermal Units (btu) in 2002 (1 btu is the energy which raises the temperature of 1 pound of water by 1 degree Fahrenheit). When someone talks about a number so large we often feel that anything that we do will be insignificant and will not matter. And indeed, the 9.45 barrels of oil that one householder might save in a year amounts to reducing the energy use of the nation by only 0.0000000548%.
But let us suppose that everyone in your town of 10,000 homes does the same. Now you and your neighbors will reduce the energy use of the entire nation by 0.000548% and we will not need to import 94,500 barrels of oil.
And if you and everyone in your state of 1 million homes adopted the same small, simple, low-technology solar initiative, you would reduce the overall energy use of the United States of America by 0.0548% and we would not need to import 94,500,000 barrels of oil.
Taking the idea one step further, if all 100 million homes in the nation adopted this simple solar initiative we would reduce the overall energy use of the nation by 5.48% and we could avoid the import of over 9,450,000,000 barrels of oil.

This is just the first in many small steps that we can each take as individuals to secure a better future for ourselves and our children. Act now. Make a difference.
Wayne Conrad
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