Since my wife and I moved to Western Massachusetts in the summer of 2022, we’ve been working with Berkshire Community Action Council to make our house more sustainable as far as heating and electricity are concerned. We heat with an oil-fueled furnace which runs a steam radiator system that also provides our hot water.

Things we’ve done so far:

Through a BCAC program, we had been considering replacing the oil furnace with a heat pump system, but the rules for the program say that there can be no heat unit in the basement (where my wife has her weaving studio), and you can’t keep the oil furnace as backup heating source. Given the coldness of the winters here, and the challenge of our house’s floor plan (many smallish rooms), we recently decided to forgo the heat pump and stick with the oil furnace for the time being.

Our rooftop solar panels feed into the grid; we do not have any batteries. We pay aproximately $111.00 a month for the panels, which are on a 30-year loan. Our plan is to pay them off earlier.

Eight months out of the year – April through November – our solar panels generate more electricity than we use. We haven’t had to pay National Grid for electricity since the west-facing panels were installed in 2024. We’re currently carrying a $618 credit on our electric bill.

Our oil bill is about $2000 a year.

Some things I want to research (and will publish here):

I’m certain other things will arise, including eventually replacing our aging cars with an EV (perhaps with the addition of more solar panels).