I agree. That's fairly self-evident. If you have an average operating time of say, 5 minutes a day, it would be hard to make a case for changing. Even on the basis of being a greenie.Also, depending on burn time per year and energy cost, the expected payback period assuming common interest rate might not meet expected project ROI.
However, in the example of my office, the one at home, I normally spend at least three hours in the evening responding to emails, deleting those that are irrelevant, and attending to non-business matters. Say 1,000 hours in round figures.
At current domestic energy costs here, the return on investment for changing to the more efficient technology is about 70% for the first year which vastly outstrips the cost of the money invested in pretty much anything else. In the following years up to the expected lifetime of the unit which could be at least another ten years, there is no investment. So the subsequent savings are free money.
Like the V-12 like in my avatar?Say you have an old V8 car that gets 12mpg.
Very smooth, very quiet, and very quick.
And very thirsty. With UK fuel prices and a growing family, it had to go.