Heat pumps move more energy than they actually consume
While a standard heater turns electricity into warmth, these systems act like a conveyor belt, pulling free warmth from the frozen ground to multiply your energy.
Most electric heaters are limited by a hard ceiling of physics: they can never provide more than one unit of heat for every unit of electricity they consume. Heat pumps break this rule by acting as thermal scavengers rather than creators. Instead of burning fuel, they use a refrigerant to grab heat from the outside air or the stable 10-degree Celsius soil underground and pump it indoors. This allows them to deliver up to five times more energy than they use to run.