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You are here: Home / Air Preparation / What is compressed air heat recovery?

What is compressed air heat recovery?

May 27, 2025 By Paul Heney

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By Ron Marshall

If you’re running air compressors in your facility, you might be sitting on a gold mine of wasted energy — literally. Up to 94% of the electrical energy used by an air compressor is converted into heat. The good news? Most of that heat is recoverable. The better news? You can turn it into serious cost savings. Here’s how to calculate those savings:

When your air compressor is running, it generates a lot of heat. In fact:

  • About 90–94% of input energy becomes heat
  • With the right setup, up to 90% of that heat can be recovered
  • The heat can be reused for space heating, water heating, or process applications.

Instead of venting it out of the building, recovering that heat means you buy less fuel or electricity to generate heat elsewhere.

The basic formula
To estimate your savings from heat recovery, use this formula:

Recoverable heat (kWh) = Compressor power (kW) × Operating hours × 0.90

… then:

Annual savings ($) = Recoverable heat × Cost of displaced energy ($/kWh or $/therm)

 

Fig. 1. The heat recovery of this compressor displaces natural gas costs in heating this equipment room. Outside air is drawn in through the wall, is tempered by the heat produced by the compression element and motor, and the heated air is expelled into the room. In summer, the heat is sent outdoors.


Example: Real-world savings
Let’s say you have a 100 kW (125-hp) compressor that runs 4,000 hours per year in the heating season, and your facility uses electric heating at $0.10/kWh.

Recoverable heat = 100 kW × 4,000 hrs × 0.90 = 360,000 kWh/year
Annual savings = 360,000 kWh × $0.10 = $36,000

That’s $36,000 per year you’d otherwise spend on electric heating — gone up in waste heat. If you’re offsetting natural gas or fuel oil, the math shifts, but the savings can still be substantial. At current prices, the savings would be about $20,000 per year.

To recover heat, you’ll need:

  • A heat recovery system (like air-to-air or air-to-water exchangers); air compressors can have these internally
  • A plan to use the recovered heat efficiently (e.g., HVAC, process, domestic water)
  • A look at your compressor room setup and existing infrastructure

If you’re not recovering heat from your air compressor, you’re leaving money on the table. Heat recovery can improve energy efficiency, reduce your facility’s carbon footprint, and pay for itself quickly.

Filed Under: Air Compressors, Air Preparation

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