Posts Tagged ‘renewable heat’

 

UK Renewable Heat Premium Payment Launched

Tuesday, January 17th, 2012

On 1 August the UK Government opened applications for the Renewable Heat Premium Payment (RHPP), part of the Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI), a financial support mechanism for households to switch to renewable heating systems. As part of the scheme householders could get up to £1,250 (€1,400) of government funding for biomass boilers, air and ground source heat pumps and solar thermal panels.

The RHPP, which is primarily aimed at the 4 million UK households not heated by mains gas, will make around £12 million (€13,7 million) available to householders. Applications are open from 1 Aug 2011 to 31 March 2012, and it is estimated that up to 25,000 installations will receive support.

According to Climate Change Minister Greg Barker, the RHPP launch marks the start of a “new era in home heating”, helping to create a market in renewable heating technology development, sales and installations, whilst also helping to cut the country’s carbon emissions.
Renewable Heat Premium Payment (RHPP)
The Energy Saving Trust will administer the RHPP scheme. Homes eligible for the payment are those in England, Scotland or Wales not currently fitted with gas as the main heating fuel. Grants will be awarded on a first come first served basis.
Chief Executive of the Energy Saving Trust Philip Sellwood has said that there is a high level of householder satisfaction with heat technologies. The main barrier to their widespread uptake is the high up-front cost of such systems. The RHPP should help overcome this obstacle.
The RHPP is available for the following technologies:
  • Ground source heat pump – £1250 (€1,400) grant (for homes without mains gas heating)
  • Air source heat pump – £850 (€970) grant (for homes without mains gas heating)
  • Biomass boiler – £950 (€1,080) grant (for homes without mains gas heating)
  • Solar thermal hot water panels – £300 (€340) grant (available to all households regardless of the type of heating system used)
It is hoped that by providing discounts for eco heaters the scheme will dramatically reduce energy costs of those reliant on expensive oil or electric heating.
What to do to apply? 
Before applications for the grant will be accepted properties have to have loft and cavity wall insulation in place, in addition to having all the necessary planning permissions. Moreover, only certified installers may put in place the eligible renewable technologies.
Another requirement of the RHPP is that householders submit information on how the installed technology is performing through a set of surveys. For a significant sample of participants, the Government will also provide meters for the heating equipment that will enable comparisons to be made on performance and energy use of the different available systems.
Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI)
The consumer feedback will inform the Government’s decision regarding how the Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) will work in the domestic sector. The RHPP is the forerunner of the Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI). It is anticipated that those households in receipt of the RHPP will be able to apply for the full RHI tariff once the scheme is introduced in the domestic sector, planned for the autumn of 2012.
On 30 September the RHI will open for applications for financial assistance for industry, business and communities.

1 in 4 new homes equipped with a heat pump in Germany’s most populous state

Monday, January 16th, 2012

More than 28% of the building permits awarded for the construction of new residential buildings in the first three quarters of 2011 foresaw a heat pump as the main heating supplier in North Rhine-Westphalia, according to the statistical office of Germany’s most populous state.

Compared to 2000 figures when just 0.7% of all granted permits for new residential buildings included a heat pump system, 2011 figures translate to a 40-fold increase.

The statisticians of the regional office will be soon also in a position to provide statistics regarding the use of water heating dedicated heat pumps in the region, while they will also be integrating questions regarding cooling and ventilation systems in the list of questions addressed to building owners and architects applying for permits.

But countrywide investment in renewable heat insufficient for meeting national renewables targets

However, a recent study by EuPD Research, DCTI and Wuppertal Institute commissioned by the Renewable Energy Agency with the participation of the Federal Association for Renewable Energy and the Hannover Messe concludes that investments in the renewable heat sector is short of what is needed for meeting Germany’s renewables targets for 2020.

The study finds that in 2010 Germany invested a total of €3.6 billion in the renewable heat sector, of which €3.4 billion were invested in the production and installation of new heating systems and just €215 million in expanding production capacity. For comparison a total of € 26.8 billion was invested in renewable electricity generation, and a total of €3.8 billion euros in the corresponding production capacities.

The insufficient investment in renewable heat can be attributed mainly to the funding policy, according to Philip Vohrer, Managing Director of the Agency for Renewable Energies: “The funding policy in the heating sector in the past was not reliable. This meant that many consumers and businesses had to wait and postpone investments.”

Towards a market-based approach for supporting renewable heat?

To address such concerns, the German government has already signaled that it might soon be revising its approach in supporting renewable heat by moving to a market-based approach (similar to feed-in tariffs used for supporting renewable electricity or similar to the UK Renewable Heat Incentive scheme): According to the Governmental Energy Concept adopted in September 2010, the German government “will consider non-budget-related support through a market-based incentive system for renewable heat”. This would mean the setting up of a support scheme whereby the owners of renewable heating equipment will be rewarded according to the renewable heat output produced by their equipment over a given number of years, instead of receiving a one-off grant for the installation of renewable heating technologies.