Earth loops can cut your utility bills by Michael Dunn
The first time  I heard the term “earth loops,” I figured it was some nutty new breakfast cereal  for the granola crowd. ”How about a hearty bowl of Earth Loops? Oh, sure they  taste like truck tires, but they’re crunchy and nutritious, and they won’t hurt  the ozone layer!” Well, it turns out I was wrong. (Although I still think they’d  be good with milk.) 
Actually, earth loops are components of geothermal technology, which uses the  ground as a heat-exchange medium. Because the ground absorbs energy from the sun  and stores it deep beneath the surface, people can tap into that stored energy  and use it to heat and cool homes. Here’s how it works: A series of polyethylene  pipes filled with ordinary tap water is buried deep underground. (In cold  climates, antifreeze may be added to the water.) Using a specially designed heat  pump, the water is circulated through the pipes, which form one long, continuous  “earth loop.” In the heating mode, the liquid in the pipes is cooler than the  ground. In the cooling mode, the soil is cooler than the liquid. Because heat  always moves from a warm area to a cooler one, heat is exchanged between them,  said Paul Fink, territory manager for WaterFurnace Southeast. 
WaterFurnace introduced the first closed-loop system to South Florida in  1990, and since then the company has installed about 400 residential units, Fink  said. Last month, for example, the company installed a geothermal system at  baseball star Dwight Gooden’s St. Petersburg home. The system works – and is  energy efficient – because underground temperatures remain constant within  geographical locations, he said. In the Tampa Bay area, for instance, the  underground temperature is roughly 74 degrees year-round, compared with 70  degrees in the Panhandle and colder as you go north. 
Unfortunately, the up-front costs are expensive – roughly $8,700 for a  3-ton vertical heat-pump system – and that’s one of the reasons builders have  shied away from it. “Builders are a little bit scared of it,” said Jay Egg,  president of Egg Systems Inc., and Oldsmar company that installs the systems.  “But people love it.” Fink put it more bluntly: “If a builder is progressive and  concerned about energy and the environment,” he’ll try it. “Unfortunately, most  builders don’t fall into that category. How can I put this subtly – they’re  cheap as hell.” Palm Harbor builder Mike Connor of Schickedanz Bros. has  installed two geothermal systems and said they “seem to work real well. From  what we’ve seen, it looks like it offers pretty substantial savings.” 
Tampa Geothermal Air Conditioning
Geothermal systems work best for heating, so they’re more popular in  Northern climates, Egg said. But the system can save Floridians $40 a month on  air-conditioning bills, and because it recycles warm water, a household’s  water-heating costs are virtually eliminated, he said. Geothermal systems recoup  their costs in five to seven years, and the specially designed heat pump lasts  four to five times longer than traditional heat pumps because it is housed  indoors, he said. Egg, incidentally, has introduced a new kind of geothermal  system to the Bay area in which the earth loops are shaped like a Slinky. They  take up less space than traditional straight-pipe geothermal systems, so they  can be installed in just about any yard, he said. Those interested in learning  more about earth loops can contact EggComfort.com 
 
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