This just in: a recent geothermal study discovers what concerns homeowners have about geothermal, how long they expect contractors to take to get the job done, and where they are getting their information about the technology. Hint: YOU.
Over the next two years, Dandelion Energy will facilitate the drilling of individual ground loops and the installation of Enertech heat pumps for more than 1,500 homes across 14 communities in Colorado that are being developed by home-building giant Lennar Corp.
A recent survey found that homeowners sorta kinda have some sort of knowledge on geothermal, and they sorta kinda are interested in installing geothermal. What is a contractor supposed to do with all this? How can they change indifference to acceptance?
Enertech will consolidate its four brands — Enertech, GeoComfort, Hydron Module, and TETCO — into two unified brands: Enertech and GeoComfort by Enertech.
Mission Geo will provide information to promote the advantages and benefits of ground-source heat-pump technology to builders, contractors, architects, designers, drillers, engineers, utilities, policymakers, the owners of commercial buildings, and consumers.
The bill significantly reduces the cost of a geothermal installation, spurs job creation, and hopes to inspire more contractors to tap into the geothermal market.