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Heat pumps could become norm by 2025

  • December 18, 2023
  • 2 min read
Heat pumps could become norm by 2025

The government has announced that it is targeting making heat pumps the standard way of heating properties by 2025. This came after a consultation on the Future Homes Standard. The document said that fossil fuel boilers, hydrogen heating systems, and hydrogen solutions were incompatible with “zero-carbon ready homes.” The consultation will continue until the 6th of March 2024.

“Heat networks can be highly efficient ways of delivering heat,” the government said, “because the heat pumps on the network can be paired with thermal stores allowing the heat to be produced at times of low-cost, low-carbon electricity; such function also reduces peak demand on the local electricity grid. The heat pumps in heat networks often have a higher seasonal coefficient of performance and can be run to optimise their coefficient of performance. A concurrent notional building is being proposed to set the standard for new heat networks.”

Tamsin Lishman, chief executive of heat pump supplier The Kensa Group, said: “The publication of proposals requiring all new homes to be low-cost, low-carbon and energy efficient to run is a major step forward for the decarbonisation of homes and heat.

“This new standard will boost heat pump installations drastically, expanding the market from 50,000 to over 250,000 almost overnight, providing companies like Kensa with the confidence to go ahead and invest heavily in new manufacturing facilities and the continued development of our supply chains.

“It is particularly important that these proposals intend to make heat pumps and low-carbon heat networks the default options for heat in new homes, effectively banning new gas grid connections and so-called hydrogen-ready boilers from installation.

“Allowing these technologies to continue to be installed in new homes would simply have maintained confusion about the future of home heating and short-changed hundreds of thousands of new home buyers who would have inevitably had to replace their fossil fuel heating system in the years to come.”

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Emma Trehane

Emma Trehane is what happens when academia meets adrenaline. She’s run surf hostels, taught Sports and the Humanities, earned a PhD in English Literature, lectured on Romantic poetry, and somehow still found time to found EyeOnLondon - a multimedia platform telling the stories others miss. Her career spans broadsheet editing, media consultancy in the City, and producing reels on everything from Lucian Freud to the Silk Roads. Emma’s equally at home in the British Library or behind the camera, usually balancing a tripod, a script, and a strong opinion. A Freeman of the City of London and a member of the Chelsea Arts Club, she now channels her experience into journalism, storytelling, and the occasional martial arts session to clear her head.

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