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Cutting emissions from UK home heating
2021-10-18 00:00:00.0     星报-商业     原网页

       

       LONDON: On an industrial estate west of London, an army of plumbers is training to advance the British government’s plan to wean households off their dependence on climate-warming natural gas.

       Octopus Energy Ltd, backed by Al Gore’s sustainability fund, is helping teach the plumbers to install heat pumps that will play a pivotal role in the UK’s strategy to have net-zero emissions by 2050. The government’s heat and buildings plan, which includes subsidies for households, is expected to be unveiled in the coming days with the backdrop of an energy crisis that’s adding urgency to the transition away from fossil fuels.

       With soaring gas prices set to push up bills for millions of British households, utility Octopus is forging ahead by testing the pumps, which draw heat from the surrounding air, in two mock-up houses.

       “We’re taking a tech company approach,” chief executive officer Greg Jackson said in an interview. “We don’t want to wait around for the government like everyone else. We want to raise money and get started.”

       The biggest challenge is that heat pumps are expensive – costing about £10,000 (US$14,000 or RM56,982) to instal – and work best in the kind of well-insulated homes the UK lacks. Finding ways to lower the cost for households has been a stumbling block for the government.

       The UK is poised to announce grants of at least £5,000 (US$7,000 or RM28,576) for people who instal the pumps starting in April 2022.

       Octopus said it can get the cost of the technology below £6,000 (RM34,291) within the next nine months. Beyond that, Jackson said he can lower it to £3,500 (RM20,003), about the same as a gas boiler.

       The government plans to shift the green levies currently applied to power bills over to gas, arguing that surging prices underscore the need for the UK to end its dependency on fossil fuels. The finer details of how that would work have yet to be nailed down.

       Making the switch now would increase average bills by 50%, even as it cuts household emissions by 73%. Transferring the existing charges will be crucial, Jackson said.

       “The most important thing that government can do is shift the levies,” he said. “If you move the levies from green electricity to dirty gas, we’re close to cost-comparable already.”

       The government is targeting the installation of 600,000 heat pumps a year by 2028, still only about a third of the gas boilers fitted annually. That’s the minimum needed to have any hope of reaching net zero, said Mike Hawkins, deputy director of clean heat at the department of business, energy and industrial strategy.

       While heat pumps will face competition from alternative fuels such as hydrogen – which potentially could use existing gas infrastructure – Octopus is convinced about its technology and is doing more research to ensure it can be adapted to a changing climate.

       The “magic” of the pump, which is about the size of an air-conditioning unit, is that it produces three units of heat for every unit of electricity that goes in, Jackson said. ― Bloomberg

       


标签:综合
关键词: natural gas     fossil fuels     government     pumps     Jackson     levies     households     Octopus    
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