A recent survey shows that 6 out of 10 Norwegians want to lower the heat to reduce it its power consumption. – It can result in very large costs at a later date, warns the injury prevention company in the insurance company.
– It can be tempting to save a few kroner, but it can result in very large costs at a later date. It is important to have sufficient heat so that the pipes do not freeze, says injury prevention therapist Therese Nielsen in the insurance company Fremtind.
Recently, there have been record high electricity prices, and Europe is in a power crisis. This is partly due to high gas and coal prices, in addition to expensive CO2 quotas. Here in Norway, people in the south experienced the highest electricity prices ever on Tuesday last week.
6 out of 10 Norwegians want to turn down the heat to save money, shows a survey conducted by Respons analysis recently for Fremtind, the insurance company of SpareBank 1 and DNB. 1271 people aged 18-90 years participated in the survey.
Last winter, Fremtind registered a record number of water damage – over 1600 due to frost, to a total compensation amount of over 46 million kroner.
– If you do not have sufficient heat in wet rooms and rooms with pipes, you may have to take part of the bill even if you get a frost or water damage. And do not forget enough heat in the cabin, if you have it, it is perhaps even more exposed, Nielsen says.
– Potentially very dangerous
Nielsen is concerned that people follow the advice to use electricity when it is cheapest, which is often at night.
– This can potentially be very dangerous. Most of the fires we register start in electrical appliances and facilities, says Nielsen.
One contributing reason is that more and more people have private electric scooters and charge these at home, Nielsen states. The insurance company has registered several cases of batteries that have exploded during charging, as well as cases where the batteries have exploded even when they are not charging.