Government urged to trust industry with climate change issues

Mike Foster:
Mike Foster

The government has been accused of ‘Soviet-style production planning’ by the chief of the Energy and Utilities Alliance (EUA) since the UK’s mass roll-out of heat pumps does not consider market demand.

Under plans being drawn up by BEIS, a legal obligation will be placed on boiler manufacturers to make alternative products, such as heat pumps, that compete with gas boilers. If manufacturers fail to sell the required levels of alternative products, the company will be penalised, the EUA has explained.

The proposals, which will form part of the government’s heat and building strategy that is due to be published in June, was being brought in to ensure the government hits its target of 600,000 heat pump installations every year from 2028.

Mike Foster, chief executive of the EUA, said: “I’ve already heard this proposal described as Soviet-style production planning that prioritises the supply of a product rather than the generation of demand. If this goes ahead, we are potentially going to get the heat pump equivalent of unwanted Lada cars that consumers don’t want and won’t buy. This is a crude attempt to manipulate the market for domestic heat and it won’t work.

“BEIS is trying to drive consumers towards heat pumps by taking away the alternatives, but it is important that consumers are given a choice about the technologies in their homes.”

“The UK’s boiler industry is a manufacturing success story that developed the combi boiler, which has already done so much to improve domestic fuel efficiency and reduce household carbon emissions.

“It would be wrong to categorise the industry as deaf and blind to climate change issues. Huge amounts of R&D resources are being poured into the development of hydrogen boilers that can deliver the governments Net Zero targets without crude market manipulation and the denial of consumer choice.”

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