Libmonster ID: KE-2892

Norway is a country where winter lasts for half a year, and the temperature can drop to -40°C. At the same time, Norwegians pay 2-3 times less for heating than Russians (relative to income). The secret lies in energy-saving technologies and mindset. We tell you how Norwegian houses are structured and what we can learn from them.

Passive Houses (Passivhaus)

In Norway, houses are built that require almost no heating. Thick walls (30-50 cm of insulation), triple-glazed windows, sealed doors. Heat from people, household appliances, and sunlight is enough to maintain +20°C even in freezing temperatures. Ventilation with heat recovery (95% of heat is returned). There are no radiators in such houses. Construction costs are 10-15% higher than usual, but it pays off in 5-7 years.

There are over 20,000 passive houses in Norway (for a population of 5 million).

Smart metering and tariffs

Each home has a "smart" meter that transmits real-time consumption data. Tariffs fluctuate: cheaper at night (2-3 times), more expensive during the day. Norwegians wash clothes, do dishes, charge electric cars at night. There is also a "dynamic tariff" program: when the wind is strong (a lot of electricity), the price drops to zero. The house automatically turns on heating. Smart sockets turn off "vampires" (televisions, chargers in standby mode).

Electricity consumption for heating is reduced by 20-30%.

Heat pumps (not gas)

There are almost no gas boiler houses in Norway. 90% of houses are heated by heat pumps (air-air, air-water, ground-source). The pump takes heat even from cold air (down to -30°C). Efficiency is 3-4 kW of heat per 1 kW of electricity. The state subsidizes installation (up to 50% of the cost). Ban on oil heaters. Thanks to the pumps, the average heating bill is 1000 kroner (8000 rubles?) per month, with a salary of 40,000 kroner.

In Russia, gas is still burned in boiler houses (losses up to 30%).

Geothermal heating

Geothermal pumps are popular in Norway. A pipe with antifreeze is lowered into a well 100-200 meters deep. In winter, the temperature at the depth is +5...+8°C, in summer — +15°C. The heat pump raises the temperature to 50°C. The system operates for 30-50 years. The installation cost is 20,000-30,000 euros, which pays off in 7-10 years. The state provides a subsidy of 20%.

In Russia, geothermal pumps are rare (expensive, no subsidies).

Wind turbines on roofs

Wind energy is underdeveloped in Norway due to mountains, but vertical wind turbines are installed on the roofs of private houses (quiet, do not kill birds). They produce 10-20 kWh per day (cover household needs). Surplus is sold to the grid at a green tariff. In 2026, vertical wind turbines became twice cheaper (about 3000 euros). Payback period is 5 years. Russia: isolated projects in Kaliningrad.

Norwegians save heat and electricity not out of poverty, but out of ecological consciousness and economy. They do not want to depend on fossil fuels. We have something to learn from them: insulate houses, install heat pumps, night tariffs. While Russia heats the air, Norway heats people.


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Energy conservation in Norwegian homes // Nairobi: Kenya (LIBRARY.KE). Updated: 01.06.2026. URL: https://library.ke/m/articles/view/Energy-conservation-in-Norwegian-homes (date of access: 12.06.2026).

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