When we moved into where we live 40 years ago, there was no gas in the village. But a street main was installed about 25 years ago.no gas supply to your house?? Gas to heat the house, heat the water and to cook is by far the most cost effective and reliable system.
To get a gas supply from that main is now £2760, well it was two years ago. That gets me a pipe next to the nearest wall (garage in our case) and a meter in a surface mounted cabinet. Plus the cost of getting from there to where I actually need the gas. Then there's the cost of the boiler and installation. Also, you need to consider that the government have banned all domestic gas boiler sales from 2035, so we'd be buying in to a doomed heating type.
What was funding the costs of the gas conversion was the difference between the unit cost of gas and the unit cost of electricity. "No contest!" I hear you shout. But I am on a dual-rate electricity tariff, so gas is competing with the night rate tariff, which in my case was so close to the gas tariff that the gap failed to fund the conversion cost sufficiently.
Incidentally, despite having British Gas as my electricity supplier, I could not get them to give me a quote for the price of gas! Yes, I know crazy isn't it? But the first question was "what is your meter number?" Because I didn't have one, I could not get any further. I didn't stop there of course, I sent emails headed "all-electric, but I want gas.," but got no meaningful response. I tried the phone with the theme, "help me be a customer", but could get no sense from anyone. I tried other energy companies, but every single one gave me the same run around, no meter, no gas. Not a single one actually engaged with the issue.
So how did I get any gas prices? My brother has a similar sized house to me, uses gas for heating and hot water but not cooking. He has a total energy consumption close to mine. So I asked him what he was paying. I also asked friends what they were paying. In the end, using the best data I could get, I decided that I could not justify converting to gas. It would have been hugely disruptive to the house and garden (wife hated the thought) and the payback period was 7.5 years +/- 15%. The variability depends upon the accuracy of my price estimates and the variable use of gas depending upon a cold winter or not.
In contrast, the battery installation was quick and easy, took just over four hours and was not disruptive at all. Based upon my then current energy supplier, the payback period was 4.6 years, so I went ahead. Once I had the battery and could see first-hand what it was doing, I changed energy suppliers and I now have a payback period of 3.3 years. After that it's all gravy!
In addition, the battery was £5k cheaper to buy and install than the gas conversion and will save £640 per year more.
PS: As I mentioned earlier, I had already taken a detailed look at solar panels. They had a similar cost to the battery, but a payback similar to the gas conversion. Wife had said "over my dead body!"