In Hot Off The Press I reported on a Guardian article that appeared on 30th May this year, seeking to spin a survey on heat pumps. To my mind, the survey was much more equivocal regarding satisfaction with heat pumps than the Guardian piece suggested. Well, now they’re at it again, with another article, with the heading “Heat pumps twice as efficient as fossil fuel systems in cold weather, study finds” and sub-heading “Doubts about whether heat pumps work well in subzero conditions shown to be unfounded, say researchers”. The article is based on a study with the title “Coming in from the cold: Heat pump efficiency at low temperatures”.

The article claims that research shows heat pumps to be more than twice as efficient as fossil fuels at low temperatures, out-performing oil and gas heating systems even at temperatures as low as -30C. The UK is falling behind with regard to the heat pump roll-out (you can say that again), and it’s because people have been scared by false information regarding their efficacy at low temperatures. We are also told:

The UK government is consulting on proposals for incentives to households to take up heat pumps, which at about £7,000 or more can cost two or three times as much up front as gas boilers. Boiler companies are also to be penalised if they fail to sell enough heat pumps, under a “market-based mechanism” that will require them to sell a certain quota of heat pumps or pay a penalty.

Some proponents of gas boilers have railed against the quota, which they claim will add costs to consumers, and at least one boiler company has responded by telling customers that the price of new gas boilers is likely to go up as a result of this green measure.

The second of those two paragraphs is more than a little strange, carrying with it the implication that the proponents of gas boilers and “at least one boiler company” are somehow behaving badly in making such claims, since it’s abundantly obvious that the “claims” (note the loaded language) are clearly correct.

Be that as it may, we should look at the survey which provided the hook on which the Guardian hangs yet another heat pump article. It was published on 11th September 2023, and has four co-authors. The first named are Duncan Gibb, “a senior advisor at the Regulatory Assistance Project (RAP), a global team of highly skilled energy experts with a focus on heat decarbonization policy”, and Jan Rosenow, also of RAP. RAP, according to its website is “an independent, global, non-governmental organization advancing policy innovation and thought leadership within the energy community.” Independent, perhaps, but with a very definite interest in pushing things like heat pumps:

For more than three decades, RAP has been a leader in developing solutions to the world’s most pressing power sector challenges. In the next five years RAP will focus on key policy areas to drive a more efficient and equitable decarbonized energy future and to ensure a sustainable and just transition: Accelerate electrification of buildings and transportation; accelerate the phaseout of gas infrastructure; remove barriers to distributed energy resources; and decarbonize the electric grid.

Messrs Gibb and Rosenow regularly write articles extolling the virtues of heat pumps, such as How the energy crisis is boosting heat pumps in Europe and How to solve the UK’s heat pump problem.

The two other authors are Dr Richard Lowes (also of RAP) and Professor Neil Hewitt, Head of School at the Belfast School of Architecture and Built Environment at Ulster University.

All four gentlemen are highly qualified and knowledgeable about heat pumps. I think it’s probably also fair to say that they are all rather keen on decarbonisation generally, and heat pumps specifically. Not that this in any way invalidates their research and findings, but when analysing their study, I think it’s worth bearing in mind that they may start with a predisposition to encourage heat pump take-up.

As the introductory paragraph makes clear, the object of the study is to analyse “field studies with real-world performance data of air-source heat pumps” with a view to responding to the suggestion “that heat pumps cannot deliver useful efficiencies at lower temperatures.” Perhaps I am being unkind, but it seems to me that the starting-point is to seek evidence that will help to debunk criticism of the efficacy of heat pumps when the temperature is very low (i.e. precisely when a good heating system is most needed). In the words of the authors, their “commentary responds to this question”. And this is the conclusion:

It finds that well below 0°C, heat pump efficiency is still significantly higher than fossil fuel and electric resistive heating systems at an appliance level. The standard heat pumps investigated in this commentary demonstrate suitable coefficients of performance for providing efficient heating during cold winters where temperatures rarely fall below −10°C, i.e., most of Europe.

I accept that finding at face value, of course. However, there are issues that suggest that notwithstanding the findings, heat pumps really are not the answer for many UK householders, though the study does not mention these, or at least, insofar as it does, it doesn’t draw that conclusion. The first issue is with regard to the price of gas and electricity for UK domestic consumers. A quick visit to a price comparison website suggests that electricity in the UK currently costs domestic consumers somewhere between 26.6p and 28.67p per Kwh, with an across-the-board daily standing charge of 42p. For gas, the daily standard charge is set at two-thirds that level, at 28p. However, the Kwh charge is much cheaper, with prices ranging from 6.46p to 7.21p. Roughly speaking then, electricity is around four times as expensive as gas to use, with a daily charge that is 50% higher. Ignoring the costs of changing a gas boiler for a heat pump (though in the real world, such a cost is all too relevant), installing a heat pump would seem to make sense for most householders only if a heat pump’s efficiency was four times greater than the efficiency of a gas boiler (all other things being equal). Does the study find this to be the case? This is the finding:

Heat pump efficiency is measured by the device’s coefficient of performance (COP), the ratio of the useful heat outputted to energy consumed. Typical COP values for heat pumps lie in the range of 3–6, indicating that 3 to 6 units of heat are created from each unit of electricity used. A year-round average COP of 3–4 is common for household applications.

If I understand it correctly, the COP of a standard gas boiler is around 0.9 (see, e.g. here). And so, all things being equal (except that they’re not), at first blush the heat pump might seem to pass that test. But even then there’s a problem:

The temperature difference between a heat pump’s source (the outside air) and sink (heating supply location) plays a determining role in the COP and, therefore, its overall performance. If the source temperature dips and the sink temperature is maintained, the COP falls. Around freezing temperatures, air-source heat pumps also can experience a reduction in COP due to the defrosting of external components.

That “year-round average COP of 3–4” for heat pumps is just that – a year-round average. In warm summer weather (when the heat pump is little-used, if it is used at all), the COP will be above that figure. And in cold winter weather (when the heating source is most urgently required) the COP will be below that figure – and the colder it gets, the lower the COP will be. In fact, we are told:

When the outside temperature was between 5°C and −10°C, the mean COP across all systems was 2.74 and the median was 2.62, sufficient to meet heating loads at much higher efficiency than fossil heating and electric resistance heat alternatives.

Also:

Below 0°C, the COP maintains a level well above 2 in all cases, meaning that an air-source heat pump would operate at more than twice the efficiency of combustion or resistive electric heating technology.

Thus, even though heat pumps do “demonstrate suitable coefficients of performance for providing efficient heating during cold winters”, and even though they may be wonders of efficiency, they will still be significantly more expensive than gas boilers to use in winter for the average UK householder (up to twice as expensive).

The study seeks to justify the underlying theme that heat pumps are fine in cold countries, by including statistics demonstrating high heat pump penetration in Estonia and in Scandinavian countries. But we are told nothing about energy pricing in those countries, and the authors go on to concede that “[t]he data do not provide insights about the achieved efficiency of those heat pumps” while nevertheless optimistically inferring that “the large share of household installations suggests that heat pumps can effectively provide heating in colder climates.

Perhaps the optimistic inference is justified, but in order to establish that, we would need to know much more about the nature of the housing stock in those countries compared to the state of the UK’s housing stock. Surprisingly perhaps, I can see scarcely any attention paid to this issue at all. Instead, there is an almost throwaway remark to the effect that:

In any case, to mitigate the impact of peak heating loads on energy systems, efforts can be made toward improving the performance of the building stock to minimize load and level off heating demand peaks, as well as encourage demand response.

And as to the claim that “that heat pumps can be successfully installed in these conditions without concerns over performance or the need for back-up heating capacity”, that is subject to this rather important, but casually mentioned caveat:

This is subject to thorough heating system design and a high-quality installation in a building.

Further, as I mentioned above, all things are not equal when comparing heat pumps with gas boilers. Much of the UK’s housing stock is old and badly insulated. Much of it would need expensive works to be implemented before heat pumps could be installed and provide adequate heating. As the Homebuilding website I referred to above says:

Ultimately, if you opt for a heat pump rather than a gas boiler, you will need to size the radiators and/or UFH pipe lengths very precisely. You will also need to be able to control the speed of the water in the circuit as well as the delivery of heat to the circuit. The balance is critical and certainly not always possible in older or ‘energy hungry’ properties.

So, if you ask yourself ‘should I swap my gas boiler for a heat pump?’, you need to be aware that you’ll likely need to update your existing radiators and pipework, as well as your heat source, in an existing home.

The study concludes with a statement that the authors declare no competing interests, but also with an acknowledgement that “[t]his work was funded by a grant by the Crux Alliance.” Of course, the source of funding doesn’t invalidate the study’s findings, but it’s perhaps worth noting that the Crux Alliance (as its website puts it) is:

…a group of globally recognized, technically expert organizations that are laser-focused on advancing policies—unbiased, pragmatic, and localized—to generate powerful action in the countries and sectors that matter most for carbon reduction. The members of the Crux Alliance, known as Crux Policy Centers (CPCs), support policymakers around the world working to retire polluting power plants and to replace polluting vehicles, factories, and buildings with low-carbon alternatives—and to grow these alternatives at speed and scale. The Crux Alliance is all about getting climate policy right, right now.

In other words, it might not be too unfair to say that it has a policy position that is probably keen to encourage (among other things) the uptake of heat pumps.

As I see it, the study makes the case that heat pumps can work in cold temperatures, and that in some countries with cold winters they are widely used. It does not go on to make the case that it makes financial (or any other) sense to encourage a large-scale swapping of gas boilers for heat pumps in the UK, with its often inappropriate housing stock, expensive electricity (compared to the price of domestic gas) and high up-front costs. I see nothing in it to justify the tenor of the Guardian article reporting on it, to the effect that the UK should “bring in new measures to roll them [heat pumps] out as rapidly as possible.

85 Comments

  1. Can anyone here tell me what type of ‘heatpump’ is used in colder countries? do they use air/water as in the UK or do they use air/air unit? ie: are they blowing warm air around or heating water to run radiators?

    Liked by 2 people

  2. Mark, I refer you again to this chart. The COP of air source heat pumps is not just a function of the outdoor temperature, it also depends on the temperature of the heated water. If you want luke warm water at 35C, the heat pump COP is about 2.5 during cold winters, which still means it’s not economical compared to gas. But if you want water at 65C, comparable to a gas boiler, the COP drops below 2 at outdoor temperatures below +2C. With the price of electricity, this means that air source heat pumps would be MUCH more expensive to run than a gas central heating combi boiler, if you want decent hot water and you don’t want to go to the expense of having to fit all new aluminium extra large radiators in addition to a very expensive heat pump. This study says nothing new; it is just spinning old news as good news, when in fact the news is, as ever, that heat pumps are currently uneconomical and struggle to provide usable hot water during the winter, as well as heat your house to a comfortable temperature, whereas gas boilers can can keep your house warm AND provide a hot bath or shower for a fraction of the overall cost.

    Liked by 2 people

  3. Lordelate,

    In Scandinavian countries, they generally have air to air heat source pumps, which work more efficiently than air to water. Water is heated by electricity, which was/is cheaper than it is in the UK.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. My son lives on the Canadian east coast. Not the coldest part of Canada but it has it’s share of snow and freezing rain. He has a new build house which is timber framed and well insulated. He has an air source to air heat pump which seems to work quite well in their open plan house. However, Canadian houses have long been designed for warm air heating which requires extensive ducting so builders are used to installing ducted air systems. Supplementary baseboard (skirting board) electric heaters are necessary to handle low temperatures and there is a heat exchanger to recover heat from exhaust to inlet air.

    There’s no mains gas available, heating oil has got expensive and electricity is relatively cheap (for now). Air to air systems can also provide cooling in summer. It seems to me that air to water heat pumps are a very poor option – air at 25C warms you up, radiators at the same temperature not so much. If I was building a new house and forced to use electric heating I would take the lead from Canadian house design.

    Liked by 3 people

  5. “Heat pumps twice as efficient as fossil fuel systems in cold weather, study finds”

    Relating to Gt Britain, I’ve no issue with that claim.

    The crux of the matter for Brits is running costs.

    From the figures Mark provides, broadly speaking, the cost of electricity is at least 3x that of natural gas per useful kWh.

    Consequently, the Graun’s alternative conclusion should have stated that for us in Britain, heat pumps cost ~50% more to run vs natural gas boilers! 😉

    HP advocates invariably ‘forget’ to mention two very important factors that (detrimentally) affect HP annual running costs:

    1. Slow-response HPs must run for more hours than a swift-response boiler, particularly in winter when many must run 24/7 during the coldest weather, even when e.g. households are sleeping or out at work all day. This means that heat is being lost during prolonged heat-up periods. HP advocates fail to account for the costs of this unnecessarily-wasted heat.

    2. Electricity prices are quoted from the ‘annual average’ price. However, HPs run most hours most of the time in winter when electricity prices are highest* and HP’s efficiency is lowest.

    *Average annual electricity prices are proportions of day rate + night-rate (usually 11pm-6am), and heating systems are used when it’s cold & people want heat (i.e. daytime / early evening)

    Liked by 2 people

  6. @Jaime “Water is heated by electricity, which was/is cheaper than it is in the UK.”

    There are two separate water circuits. One is warmed water serving space-heating (SH) radiators or fan-convectors; the other is the domestic hot water (DHW) supply serving taps, showers etc.

    DHW needs to be at a temperature greater than that 35℃ at which a HP is shown to have its highest COP! So if the HP is supplying DHW, it will generally be at ~55°C, so at a lower COP.

    Alternatively, the HP working at its higher COP but lower flow temperature, will have a circuit supplying a bulky, heavy hot-water storage cylinder where its temperature may then be boosted by an electric immersion heater. HP advocates fail to point out that immersion heaters have a COP of ‘only’ 1.0. Another factor that increases the running costs of those electric systems.

    Note the white DHW storage cylinders in the BBC’s Octopus HP puff-piece. Those with sharp eyes will also spot what appear to be (black-coloured) immersion-heater bosses.

    Most modern boilers are ‘combi’ type serving both SH + DHW from a single compact heat source.

    Compare & contrast the HP’s complexity and space demands vs a simple boiler ….

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  7. Many thanks to you all for the interesting and insightful comments. Perhaps I should have ended with a conclusion to the effect that the Guardian headline should have been “New study conclusively demonstrates inappropriateness of heat pumps for use in UK homes”.

    Liked by 2 people

  8. Thanks for your replies.

    As I suspected, it seems to me that air/air units are better (more economical?), and can also provide cool blown air in summer. blown air heating seem to be rare in the UK now after being popular 50 odd years ago, they dont appear much in the UK now exept as air con units in mainly commercial settings.

    Repeatedly I have seen the statement that air/water units can provide cooling in summer but clearly this is not possible. the uk public is being miss informed on a grand scale.

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  9. I was talking with a friend at the weekend about heat pumps. They have one to provide heating in their house and last winter were paying an average of £22.00 per day for electricity!

    Liked by 1 person

  10. I’ve read that ‘study’ now which is little more than a HP propaganda document which glosses over very important economic, technical and even basic physics issues and completely fails to mention the fact that heat pumps installed in colder European countries are generally air to air. Its conclusion:

    “Our view is that the widespread rollout of air-source heat pumps around the world as part of decarbonization efforts can be successful with existing technology in most areas that have space heating demand. Ground-source heat pumps and hybrid air-source systems may have significant value in the coldest climates.”

    Is totally unjustified. Pure propaganda and disinformation which of course the Guardian obligingly spreads to the public.

    Of course, now that Octopus have invented a revolutionary ‘cosy’ heat pump which can supply DHW at up to 75C, there is no need for all this quibbling about annoying technical, practical and economic issues which might impede the installation of HPs everywhere and thus save the planet from this dreadful era of global boiling. Let the HP revolution commence! What are we waiting for?

    Liked by 2 people

  11. Hi Jaime

    “Of course, now that Octopus have invented a revolutionary ‘cosy’ heat pump which can supply DHW at up to 75C, there is no need for all this quibbling about annoying technical, practical and economic issues which might impede the installation of HPs everywhere ….”

    Greg Jackson, the £multi-multi-millionaire CEO of Octopus Energy Group, hopes to increase his enormous wealth still further, and at the expense of poor taxpayers who fund the expensive kit he’s marketing. £8k for a piddling 6kW heat pump (insufficient power to serve even one shower), of which taxpayers are expected to stump up £5k via the government’s Boiler Upgrade Scheme grant, or even the entire £8k in some cases.

    Octopus unveils UK-made heat pump – free with grants

    https://octopus.energy/press/octopus-energy-unveils-next-stage-in-smart-heat-revolution-at-energy-tech-summit/

    Liked by 2 people

  12. No quibble with any of the technical arguments presented here. Congratulations to all – very informative. BUT, no mention of noise!
    Surely one of the downside of air source heat pumps is that they are noisy – and have to run more or less 24 hours a day. If you are benefitting from it, you may tolerate the noise – but what about your neighbours??? If the law says they must have one a well, so be it, but I fear that a line of expensive houses will suddenly be a lot less attractive if they all (or nearly all) make that infernal noise all the time.
    And note the law says the pump must be at least 18″ away from a boundary wall. Awkward in a small back garden behind a terraced house…

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  13. Mark, Thanks for this excellent dissection of the article.
    Others have raised the point of heating domestic water: the article seems to swerve it as the figures appear to cover space heating only.
    Another issue which does not get much coverage is humidity. We are told how the machines perform at certain temperatures but not how humidity levels affect that performance. The UK is notoriously damp whereas the colder places cited are relatively dry. I would speculate that the need for frequent defrosting of the external coils has a significant impact, not just “Around freezing temperatures, air-source heat pumps also can experience a reduction in COP due to the defrosting of external components.”
    I doubt the data are available for other countries where heat pumps are common but it would be interesting to see the relative adoption of HPs in areas with a gas supply compared to those without. It seems likely that, in many cases, the alternatives are oil, bottled gas or simple resistive heating where HPs probably have a significant cost advantage.
    My electrical knowledge is pretty limited so maybe someone can advise whether, as well as the extra load, there could be issues with starting currents? Iirc, it used to be the case that anything over 5 kW had to have a 3-phase supply.

    Liked by 1 person

  14. “Heat-pump scheme ‘one-dimensional’, say heating firms”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-norfolk-66723928

    Across the UK, our homes have about 22 million boilers that burn fossil fuels. The government wants us to help the environment by switching to electricity for heating and hot water, and has just increased incentives to householders in England and Wales.

    The scheme launched in May 2022, but has so far helped just 21,000 homes to convert. Firms behind new heating technologies say the government should go further, and faster.

    On Wednesday, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak announced incentives of at least £5,000 to install heat pumps or biomass boilers would be increased to at least £7,500….

    But read on:

    …When Damian Lofthouse wanted to change his oil-fired boiler for something greener, he considered an air source heat pump, but decided against it, despite the government incentive.

    Mr Lofthouse, from Norwich, hoped to cut his family’s carbon footprint, and using electricity for heating and hot water was the next step….

    …Mr Lofthouse, 40, asked heat pump installers to conduct surveys and draw up quotes, but the results were not positive.

    They told him “every radiator would need to be replaced” and that he might need planning permission.

    “It got to a point where it just wasn’t really sustainable for us in terms of the cost and disruption,” Mr Lofthouse said.

    He is not alone. While heat pumps can be installed in virtually any property, a briefing by the UK Parliamentary Office for Science and Technology in July said “most UK housing will need radiator upgrades to achieve good performance”.

    Katharine Kemp, from Norfolk-based Leaping Hare Renewables, said that when installing a heat pump, “the whole house can have a great deal of disruption.”

    That could be two weeks or sometimes longer, she added….

    Acknowledgement of the inappropriateness of heat pumps for many UK homes is contained here, and that’s from an enthusiast for de-carbonisation:

    …Tepeo’s CEO and founder Johann Du Plessis said the government’s policy needed to “get with the times”.

    Heat pumps were a “very important part of the solution”, he said, but it was “very one-dimensional” to try to apply a single technology to all homes.

    “Every single home in this country is different and we need to have a range of different options for people to decarbonise and electrify their heating, otherwise it’s going to put people off,” he said.

    “For millions of homes out there for whom heat pumps don’t work for a variety of reasons, those people are being excluded from the current policies that the government is employing.”…

    I’ll repeat that, with emphasis:

    For millions of homes out there for whom heat pumps don’t work for a variety of reasons…

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  15. “Heat Pump Farce Reaches New Low as Government Doubles Down on Fining Manufacturers That Sell too Many Gas Boilers”

    https://dailysceptic.org/2023/09/28/heat-pump-farce-reaches-new-low-as-government-doubles-down-on-fining-manufacturers-that-sell-too-many-gas-boilers/

    The original article is in the Telegraph, so I’m going with the Daily Sceptic summary:

    …Over the last week, the Government has finally started to straighten out its ‘Net Zero’ policy, dropping some of the crazier targets, and coming into line with most of Europe and North America. In hindsight, it was always too good to last. The Government has just updated its “strategy” on heat pumps – and even amid stiff competition it is one of its battiest yet.

    Replacing traditional oil and gas boilers with heat pumps that run on electricity will play a role in combating climate change. No one disputes that. Home heating accounts for around 14% of the U.K.’s total carbon emissions and unless that comes down it will be very hard to get to Net Zero.

    The trouble is that very few people want to make the switch. Even though the Government will soon be offering grants as high as £7,500 per home, heat pumps remain unpopular and take-up is running way below schedule.

    So, like a Soviet commissar after a couple of vodkas too many, the Government has just set a target instead. From next year, manufacturers will be told how many heat pumps they have to shift, based on the number of gas boilers they sell, and will face fines of up to £5,000 for every unit they fall short by….

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  16. “Call for more support as heat pump sales decline”

    https://www.coolingpost.com/world-news/call-for-more-support-as-heat-pump-sales-decline/

    The European heat pump industry has called for more consistent government support after initial sales figures for 2023 show a worrying decline.

    The European Heat Pump Association has warned that without stronger and more consistent policies, EU energy goals of 60 million more heat pumps by 2030 may not be met.

    After outstanding sales in 2022, first sales figures for 2023 are said to show a worrying decline, indicative of a larger trend.

    In Italy, for example, sales between the first halves of 2022 and of 2023 fell by 34%. In Finland, the drop was 17%. In Poland, it was 6% but the current trend, after the second quarter, takes the decline in sales as high as 20-30% compared to 2022.

    The sales data collected refers to heat pumps sold to installers and distributors, not to the amount received by end users. In some cases, heat pumps ordered last year by distributors – which were counted as sales in 2022 – are now stocked in warehouses waiting for end user orders.

    Changing policies

    The EHPA blames the impact of governments changing policies, particularly on subsidies and support for heat pump purchases. Gas prices have also fallen again while electricity prices stay high. “The price ratio between electricity and gas must come down,” the EHPA said…

    …“With strong policies and great sales showing a clear path ahead in 2022, heat pump manufacturers invested massively in production capacity. Now, sudden policy changes and unfavourable electricity to gas price ratios have shaken end users’ confidence,” explained EHPA secretary general Thomas Nowak.

    “This is a serious threat to the heat pump sector – a key EU net zero industry – as well as slowing Europe on its path towards net zero and energy independence.”

    Nowak urged the European Commission to fast forward its upcoming heat pump action plan, and to include measures to ensure long-term stability in demand and affordability of clean heating solutions at its heart. “These measures must then be replicated at national level,” her added.

    The heat pump sector’s warning reflects the opinion of many participants at the EU Heat Pump Forum, a two day event which began yesterday, and continues today with a key-note speech from EU Energy Commissioner Kadri Simson.

    Like

  17. “Scots face ‘astronomical’ heating bills if the SNP and Greens push forward with plans to ban gas boilers by 2030, energy boss warns”

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12590383/Scots-face-astronomical-heating-bills-SNP-Greens-push-forward-plans-ban-gas-boilers-2030-energy-boss-warns.html

    Families will be left with ‘astronomical’ heating bills and colder homes if the SNP/Green Government presses ahead with its gas boiler crackdown, ministers have been warned.

    The boss of the company which operates Scotland’s gas network has highlighted how costs will soar if people are forced to switch to heat pumps.

    Mark Wild, the chief executive of SGN, says those living in draughtier and older homes will be hardest hit if they are made to ditch their gas boiler…

    ,,,Mr Wild insists the infrastructure is not in place to facilitate the change and that it will also hammer struggling families.

    He pointed out the cost of installing a heat pump is £12,000-£15,000, while the available government subsidy is only £7,500 – and that monthly energy bills will then shoot up compared to homes with gas.

    The SGN chief said: ‘There is a significant issue in the supply chain about putting these installations in. Technically, that may take several years to build up the electricians that can actually do it.

    ‘Most importantly our ambition is to keep people feeling warm and I just don’t believe heat pumps in a draughty old house will do the job.

    ‘I think people could end up with astronomical electricity bills and not be very warm.’

    Mr Wild said heat pumps may be a ‘sensible idea’ in new-build homes which are better insulated than older properties.

    But he warned decommissioning Scotland’s world-leading gas network prematurely would come to be regarded in the future in the same way as the damaging Beeching rail track cuts of the 1960s.

    He said: ‘Heat pumps should be put into new-build, well-insulated homes. If we try to put heat pumps in a rushed way into the existing housing stock then people are going to pay a lot of money and have a disappointing experience….

    Like

  18. ““Hell is a Heat Pump””

    https://dailysceptic.org/2023/10/05/hell-is-a-heat-pump/

    As Rishi Sunak has announced that we’re now allowed to keep installing new gas boilers till 2035, and they last about 15 years, that means we’ll be able to keep a gas boiler till 2050, writes Ysenda Maxtone Graham in the Spectator. “So I might even be allowed to die with a gas boiler still going in my house, and may never have to switch to an ugly, expensive air-source heat pump which makes an annoying fridge-like hum in the garden, vibrates through the bedroom wall and keeps the house at a weird, lukewarm temperature all day and night.”

    She continues:

    Were we tempted by Sunak’s raised offer of a Government grant of £7,500 for switching to a heat pump, up from £5,000, to reward us for doing our bit towards Net Zero? I don’t think so. The grant doesn’t get close to covering the full cost. You don’t even get the grant until the expensive work is completed, and the paperwork is a 12-hour job in itself, requiring a valid EPC certificate with ‘no outstanding recommendations’ for improved cavity-wall, window or roof insulation. So you must also spend a fortune on sealing your house from all possible draughts. Even my most eco-minded friends have not yet installed a heat pump. The Government policy for Britain to install 600,000 a year from 2028 has a long way to go. At the moment, the rate is just 70,000 per year.

    I asked my plumber whether I should consider a heat pump for my small Victorian end-of-terrace house, and he shook his head. “It would mean sealing all your windows and doubling the size of the radiators. We do install heat pumps, but we need our customers to know the truth. I don’t think they’re the future, to be honest. I think new technology will come along, involving hydrogen with just a bit of gas.”

    I chatted to a friend in Kent who’s in the middle of heat-pump hell. Hers was installed by a firm in Essex. It worked bearably at first, although it only heated the house to 16 degrees so they had to wear jerseys, and the water was only just hot enough for a bath. But after its first service, “it started making the most dreadful noise, as if it was about to explode”. The installer blamed the maker, the maker blamed the installer, there was found to be “air in the system”, the refrigerant had leaked out and the pipework hadn’t been properly insulated. With the installer and manufacturer still stuck in a cycle of blame, my friend has been without a functioning heat pump for six months. She is now reliant on her wood-burning stoves, her immersion heater and her oil-powered Aga for back-up.

    Like

  19. MikeHig, thanks for the link – the Spectator is where the original version of the Daily Sceptic piece (which offers a summary) can be found. I believe that the Spectator allows visitors to enjoy free access to a couple of articles a month without subscribing.

    Like

  20. Mark, sorry for doubling up on your post but, strange as it may seem, it wasn’t showing when I made my post.

    Also I still cannot put in a paragraph break – weird!

    Like

  21. Mikehig,

    No need to apologise. WordPress still seems to be behaving strangely – I am the one who should be apologising, though I’m not in charge of the problems WP seems to be causing!

    Like

  22. “Heat pumps are unaffordable despite new grant, say villagers”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-67059247

    Among a range of green policy changes made by the government last month, Rishi Sunak announced grants to help people make the transition from boilers to heat pumps would be increased. But people living in rural England say the raise barely makes a dent in the expense of switching.

    The cost of buying and installing a pump depends on the type of unit and the size of your property, but ranges between £7,000 and £35,000.

    From Monday, the grant for people in England and Wales who want to install an air or ground-source heat pump in their home increases to £7,500.

    However, the Boiler Upgrade Scheme grants do not necessarily cover the full cost of installation or any recommended property renovations….

    …So how has the change of government policy gone down with some of the estimated 9.7 million people who live in rural England?

    Stuart Jefferies lives in the small Worcestershire village of Defford, in a house estimated to date back to 1450.

    It has an oil fired central heating system and is one of 17 houses in a cul-de-sac which has no mains gas. “If you want to heat the house – it’s electric, oil or bottled gas,” he says.

    As some of his walls and windows are not insulated or double-glazed, he says a heat pump wouldn’t work efficiently in his home.

    “We’ve got some timber-framed, single-glazed, leaded windows, which I’ve got no intention of changing because it would completely change the character of the house,” Stuart says.

    “The radiators would need to be changed for larger ones, which again, is something I don’t want to do, because it would take up more space in a house that’s not particularly big.”

    According to heat pump manufacturer Grant UK, as a general rule, people can expect to fit a radiator two and a half times larger than normal to provide the same heat output as a gas or oil boiler system.

    Stuart says the increased grants announced in September “won’t make any difference” to him.

    “If the heat pump costs you five or six thousand, or maybe 10 or 12, and you’ve got another £15,000 worth of other alterations to bring the house up to a standard that it works, there aren’t many people who are going to be able to afford that.”

    The government’s push to “convert the entire country to heat pumps” isn’t a “practical proposition”, he adds…..

    Liked by 1 person

  23. We have a similar tale. The company which was offering grants for condensing gas boiler upgrades is no longer doing so – heat pump grants only available. Our solid sandstone house was built in 1744 and is totally unsuitable for a heat pump installation. We have to get an EPC soon in order to market the house. No doubt the ‘expert’ that comes round will inform us that we can benefit from extra insulation on the solid walls and floors, or even cavity insulation if they fail to notice the walls are solid stone. He’ll no doubt tell us that the gas boiler and radiators are ancient and should be replaced with an ‘efficient’ air source or ground source pump. What a farce all this is.

    Liked by 1 person

  24. JJ: the EPC may not be that bad. Apparently the assessment is based partly on operating costs so has to recognise that the price disparity between (mains) gas and electricity works against heat pumps. Good luck anyway.

    Like

  25. “Heat pump grant boosted by 50% to improve slow take-up across England and Wales
    Extra £2,500 now available for low-carbon air source heat pumps to take installation cost below a gas boiler”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/oct/23/heat-pump-grant-boosted-by-50-to-improve-slow-take-up-across-england-and-wales

    The government is increasing its air source heat pump grants for homeowners in England and Wales by 50% to £7,500 from Monday amid criticism about slow adoption of the low-carbon technology.

    The £2,500 in extra support – on top of £5,000 offered – aims to take the cost of installing an air source heat pump below that of the average gas boiler.

    Support for installing ground source heat pumps – which are not suitable for most homes in the UK as they require access to a large outdoor space – will increase from £6,000 to £7,500.

    The rise, which was announced by the prime minister, Rishi Sunak, last month alongside the watering down of a planned ban on new gas boilers by 2035, comes after the government faced criticism from the National Infrastructure Commission (NIC) on its home heating policies.

    Heat pumps are seen as critical to meeting the UK’s 2035 climate targets by halving the carbon emissions from heating buildings, which still accounts for almost one-quarter of the UK’s fossil fuel demand.

    But the government’s stated ambition for 600,000 heat pumps to be installed every year by 2028 has struggled to find public support due to the high upfront costs of installations and a lack of clear information.

    The NIC said last week that the current rate of heat pump installation is “not cutting the mustard” and the scheme’s funding needs to increase if more households are to benefit. The scheme’s current budget is underspent, according to PA, as households balk at the cost and complexity of switching.

    The infrastructure tsars called on the government to spend up to £4bn every year for the next 12 years to cover the full cost of heat pump installations, and support energy-efficiency improvements for the 1.5 million households on the lowest incomes in England.

    It also said the better off should be given access to 0% finance to cover additional costs beyond the heat pump grant and for further funds to be invested to update social housing heating systems….

    It’s only money….

    When will they realise – from heat pumps to smart meters to EVs: low public take-up is because the public don’t want them. They offer no advantages to the public, and from the public’s view are often far worse than what we have already. We don’t share their agenda. Bribing us (with our own money) won’t change that.

    Liked by 1 person

  26. “Nobody wants a heat pump, no matter how large the bribes
    It’s time the Government stopped throwing good money after bad”

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/10/24/heat-pumps-boiler-upgrade-scheme-grant/

    Ae we ever going to warm to heat pumps without hefty government bribes? In the fantasy world of net zero the price of green stuff keeps on falling, saving us money as well as the planet. The reality is somewhat different, which is why the government is increasing the grants available for heat pump installations under its Boiler Upgrade Scheme from £5000 to £7500.

    When Rishi Sunak introduced the scheme last year as Chancellor, it was envisaged that the grants would be quickly taken up, helping to boost the industry and so help to reduce prices. There was enough money in the £450 million pot for 90,000 installations. Yet as of August only 23,000 applications had been received. Hence the government is increasing the size of the grants in order to shovel money out of the door more quickly.

    Sorry, but I’m still not a buyer. For now, my perfectly well-functioning oil-fired boiler will be remaining exactly where it is. This is not because I have some ideological objection to heat pumps. On the contrary, I looked into installing one in my house over 20 years ago, before most people had heard of them – and before there was an industry in Britain. In 2010 I looked into it again, this time obtaining a quote for around £10,000. But I didn’t take the plunge, and only partly because of the cost – in fact, the government’s previous subsidy scheme for heat pumps, the Renewable Heat Incentive, was so generous with annual payments that I could have paid off the installation costs by now.

    A more fundamental reason I haven’t bought one is that I don’t have enough land for a ground-source heat pump, and no-one has yet convinced me that a less-efficient air source one would succeed in heating my house, which has a solid-walled 18th century core.

    A neighbour who did go ahead, and who now moans about his electricity bills, was told by the installer that it would succeed in providing 90 per cent of his heating needs. You can guess when the missing 10 per cent would come – on the very coldest days.

    It simply isn’t good enough. I am not paying £10,000 of my money – or even taxpayers’ money – on a heating system which doesn’t actually do the whole job…

    Like

  27. The high temperature heat pump revolution (models plugged by Octopus for example) is not going to happen and the uptake of low temperature air source heat pumps is going to continue to be low for as long as electricity costs remain high in relation to gas and the cost of installing a heat pump (plus associated plumbing works) greatly exceeds the cost of installing a new gas boiler.

    https://www.theecoexperts.co.uk/heat-pumps/high-temperature-air-source-heat-pumps

    Like

  28. I was walking past a primary school the other day, which I’ve walked past many times. This occasion however I noticed a very loud fan running which I’ve not heard before. I couldn’t see whether it was a newly installed heat pump fan, but with the way things are, it could well have been. It was making an absolute racket and I thought to myself how awful it would be to live next to that.

    Like

  29. “Homeowners Fume Over ‘Droning’ New Eco-Heaters Being Installed Across U.K.”

    https://dailysceptic.org/2023/11/19/homeowners-fume-over-droning-new-eco-heaters-being-installed-across-u-k/

    …Homeowners who have installed costly heat pumps at the behest of the Government or who have found themselves living in the vicinity of them due to their neighbours have complained that the noisy contraptions are making their lives hell.

    It comes after a report warned the pumps are too loud to be installed in millions of homes under the Government’s own noise guidelines.

    Heat pumps can produce a low constant hum of between 40 to 60 decibels (similar to the noise made by the average fridge or dishwasher) and typically run for long periods of the winter.

    The effect of this noise pollution has led residents to complain of restless nights and permanently droning urban environments which some have compared to the sound of a “jet engine taking off”.

    This week, a new report found that most air source heat pumps are too loud for properties in built up areas as the constant hum of the outdoor units would violate noise limits set for those who wish to install one without planning permission and with a Government grant.

    In order to qualify for the Government grant, any installations of heat pumps must meet noise regulations set out by the Microgeneration Certification Scheme (MCS) which state they should not generate a noise louder than 42 decibels within one metre of a neighbour’s door or window.

    But the new report, which was compiled by experts from the consultancies Apex Acoustics, Sustainable Acoustics and ANV Measurement Systems, found that none of the top heat pumps from the five main manufacturers would meet MCS standard unless they were four metres away. …

    Like

  30. Not sure about the headline:

    “House Buyers in Scotland Set to Be Forced to Rip Out Gas Boilers and Install Heat Pumps Within Two Years of Purchase”

    https://dailysceptic.org/2023/11/29/house-buyers-in-scotland-set-to-be-forced-to-rip-out-gas-boilers-and-install-heat-pumps-within-two-years-of-purchase/

    To my mind, this was the interesting (and revealing) bit:

    …In a statement to the Scottish Parliament, Mr. Harvie abandoned a previous target for a million homes to replace their boilers by 2030.

    He pushed back the timescale by at least three years following warnings that hard-pressed families struggling with a cost of living crisis could not afford it….

    Like

  31. “German heat pump rollout at risk as government suspends climate subsidies
    Move could also undermine nine funding programmes, covering schemes from energy efficient homes to cargo bikes provision”

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/dec/06/german-heat-pump-rollout-at-risk-as-government-ends-climate-subsidies

    Germany has put an indefinite stop to a series of subsidies viewed as key to meeting climate goals, a move that could undermine the rollout of heat pumps as the country attempts to plug a multi-billion-euro hole in its budget.

    Nine funding programmes, covering everything from energy efficient homes to cargo bikes for commercial use, are now on hold as Olaf Scholz’s coalition government seeks to make savings of about €17bn (£15bn).

    The government was thrown into a quandary last month over how to finance its ambitious environmental and industrial transformation programme (KTF) when the country’s highest court blocked its attempts to switch €60bn of pandemic-era borrowing to pay for it.

    The three-party government, which sees Scholz’s Social Democrats sitting alongside the Greens and the liberal FDP, has been scrambling for ideas to achieve a solution to the budget shortfall ever since. On Monday evening, the federal office for economic affairs and export control (Bafa), an agency subordinated to the economic ministry, identified the areas that will be hit.

    Consultations on how to make homes more energy efficient, which have been subsidised to the tune of several thousand euros per household, as well as the funding of collective citizen energy initiatives for onshore wind, are among the measures affected.

    Individual applications for measures which have already been approved for funding would still go ahead, Bafa said. However, industry figureheads said the pause, even if only temporary, was likely to affect market confidence and stall progress.

    Subsidies to boost the installation of heat pumps – a key pillar in the government’s attempts to wean German households off fossil fuels – will also be hit….

    It seems, then, that Germans aren’t particularly keen on heat pumps either, take-up being heavily dependent on their palms being greased with silver first. Or perhaps it’s the practical issue that’s the problem, the one that Robin regularly highlights:

    …Germany has a shortfall of about 20,000 engineers to install heat pumps and the subsidies were introduced to facilitate the training of a new generation of installers….

    It also appears that there is a backlash against the attempt to force heat pumps on people who don’t want them:

    …The accusation among environmentalists is that the German car industry – which was late to the electric car revolution – is being afforded special protection by the government.

    Germany’s attempts at environmental transformation, while often greatly admired from afar, have triggered considerable political division within the country. The far-right AfD in particular, as well as the right-wing CDU, have accused the government of overseeing an “eco-dictatorship” in its attempts to encourage both industry and private individuals to switch from fossil fuel usage to cleaner alternatives.

    The heat pump has therefore become a symbol of – as AfD supporters widely see it – an attempt to impose a new, less reliably prosperous lifestyle on them. It has even become a flashpoint in Germany’s culture wars, with the AfD comparing the government’s energy transformation programme with legislation aimed at making it easier for transgender people to self-identify….

    Like

  32. Just as with cars, our eco-Communist government is attempting to fix the market and force consumers and manufacturers to adopt THEIR preferences. The agenda is clear in both cases: to centrally monitor and control access to energy (electricity) for the purpose of travel and home heating. Gas boilers, oil fired boilers and ICE vehicles do not allow the government to impose that fine level of control and monitoring via smart metering. But there’s a problem – they are imposing punitive financial measures on manufacturers and customers for making the ‘wrong’ choice, but if customers make the ‘right’ choice, they end up with a far less efficient and useful product AND which costs them more to purchase AND which will cost them more to maintain and run because electricity prices (already 3 times the cost of natural gas) will continue to rise and it is very doubtful whether the cost of batteries will fall significantly. Also, and very importantly, if customers make the ‘right’ choice, they hand over power to the government and private corporations to micromanage their lives. Caught between a rock and a hard place, there can only be trouble ahead.

    Liked by 1 person

  33. Interesting:

    “EU Commission postpones heat pump plan until after the EU elections”

    https://www.renewableenergymagazine.com/miscellaneous/eu-commission-postpones-heat-pump-plan-until-20231220

    The European Commission has postponed its Heat Pump Action Plan until after the EU elections, despite repeated assurances that the plan would be released in early 2024.

    The original aim was to launch the plan as soon as the revised Energy Performance of Buildings (EPBD) law was finalised. That finalisation is a step closer today, with the Council’s adoption of the directive. However, the European Commission has now decided to postpone the launch of the Heat Pump Action Plan until after the EU elections, when a new Commission will be in place. This may in turn impose a significant delay in the publication of the plan.

    Heat pump sales have fallen this year, causing the sector to call for strong policy support in the form of ambitious targets and a comprehensive action plan. Manufacturers have also invested over 7 billion euros in production capacity and training of installers, building on the key role given to heat pumps in the Green Deal, Fit for 55°C package, and in REPowerEU.

    The decision to delay the launch of the Heat Pump Action Plan has drawn a strong reaction from the European Heat Pump Association (EHPA) in particular.

    “Europe is falling behind on the decarbonisation of heat” said Thomas Nowak, secretary general of EHPA. “Yet, rather than tackle the issue by developing and publishing the promised Heat Pump Action Plan, the Commission has kicked it into the long grass. This will not only impact the sector and its 7 billion euros of European investments, it will impact Europe’s path to net zero and all the consumers who want nothing more than to be able to choose affordable and sustainable clean heating. Postponing the finalisation of this plan to after the election can only be called a mistake. We urge President von der Leyen, Commissioner for Energy Simson and all Commissioners to review and revert it urgently.”…

    Like

  34. Is there a sceptic lurking in the BBC? This article contains so much stuff that sounds sceptic-made, that I wonder what the BBC thinks it’s doing:

    “Will hotter heat pumps win over homeowners?”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-67511954

    The first heat pumps Graham Hendra sold, about 15 years ago, weren’t very hot.

    “To get 50C – that was quite hard,” says the former wholesaler, referring to the temperature of the water that these devices sent to radiators, known as the flow temperature.

    Today’s gas combi boilers are typically designed for flow temperatures of around 50-60C.

    The older heat pumps might have struggled to heat some homes adequately unless the homeowner decided to install larger radiators, for example. The increased surface area of such radiators helps transfer heat into the room….

    Thus the article commences with an admission that the heat pumps they have been trying to force on us to date are inadequate.

    …But a new breed of heat pumps is emerging. Engineers have gradually improved the technology, meaning that heat pumps are now able to supply much higher temperatures, sometimes in excess of 70C.

    A major change has been the rise of new refrigerants, including R290, or propane. This is the fluid that circulates inside a heat pump. In an air source device, the refrigerant captures warmth from the outside air, even on cold days. By compressing the slightly warmed refrigerant, the heat pump is able to increase the temperature and then transfer that heat into a property.

    R290 is more environmentally friendly than older refrigerants so leaks are not as potentially damaging in climate change terms….

    Which sounds like an admission that the heat pumps they have been urging on us to date are “potentially damaging in climate terms”.

    …Another company, Vattenfall, makes a heat pump that uses a different refrigerant, R744, or CO2. It can supply even higher temperatures, up to 85C. The company expects to install 300 in Europe this winter, mostly for housing associations….

    CO2? And if there’s a leak?

    …Despite R290 allowing for improved efficiencies when supplying higher temperatures, you still get the best COPs when you run your central heating as low as possible, stresses Leah Robson, co-director of Your Energy Your Way, which installs heat pumps and solar panels among other technologies.

    She adds that there are some limitations with R290-based heat pumps, such as the fact that they cannot be located near to air bricks or windows at ground level, to eliminate the risk of the liquid refrigerant, which is flammable, leaking into such areas….</blockquote…

    So perhaps not that great after all.

    …Around 72,000 heat pumps were installed in the UK last year – a far cry from the 600,000 per year target set by the government.

    Mr Hendra, though, argues that a wider range of heat pumps and improved technology could entice more homeowners away from fossil fuel-based boilers. In his opinion, this is long overdue….

    Hence the need for another BBC puff piece, I suppose.

    Liked by 1 person

  35. Mark, it’s slowly dawning on them that they can’t have their cake and eat it. For heat pumps to gain widespread popularity in the UK, they will have to heat EXISTING radiators to a reasonable temperature, more efficiently, for about the same or less cost than gas boiler fired central heating systems. Unlike in Scandinavia, air to air source heat pumps are not going to be widely adopted or retro-fitted into the unsuitable UK housing stock and the cost of retro-fitting larger radiators to benefit from lower water temperatures is going to be prohibitive for most and probably not practical. To break even with running costs, because of the very high (and rising) cost of electricity, the COP of your heat pump is going to have to be between 3 and 4. If the outside temperature dips below zero and/or if you want decent hot water from your system for washing, that is going to be unachievable:

    You are NEVER going to achieve a COP of between 3 and 4 if you opt for an air heat pump which supplies domestic hot water at the temperatures so easily and relatively cheaply achieved by gas-fired boilers. If you fit a conventional air to water heat pump, you will have to fork out for new radiators AND you will have to install an electric immersion tank for hot water. Whichever way you look at it, installing a heat pump in the UK, especially in the colder regions further north, is a lose-lose proposition. Economics and physics will not be on your side. Then there’s the noise issue . . . . .

    Liked by 1 person

  36. A typical Guardian headline, and indeed they do manage to find a couple of enthusiasts who claim to be pleased that they installed heat pumps:

    “Greener, cheaper, much warmer’ – heat pump owners laud their new system
    Report finds users even in Victorian properties and older rural homes are noticing cheaper bills and warmer homes”

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2024/jan/08/greener-cheaper-much-warmer-heat-pump-owners-laud-their-new-system

    However, read on, and even the Guardian has to report that others have encountered problems and are very unhappy. The whole article is a puff piece. It talks about the positive findings of a report, as though this is a new development, but follow the link offered in support, and you will find that this is a report from earlier last year, which I have already debunked in a previous article. Desperate stuff from the Guardian.

    Like

  37. This article is a puff piece, mostly about solar installations (as its heading suggests), but it includes a risible effort to big up heat pump installation rates:

    “Installation of rooftop solar panels in UK hits 12-year high in 2023
    Industry data shows almost 190,000 installed last year as well as record number of heat pump installations”

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/jan/11/installation-of-rooftop-solar-panels-uk-12-year-high-2023-record-number-of-heat-pumps

    There are 27 million households (or thereabouts) in the UK. How are those heat pump installations going?

    …Meanwhile, the number of heat pumps installed across the UK rose to a record high of almost 40,000, up 25% on the previous year, according to the data. This brings the total number of certified heat pumps installed across the country to more than 200,000…

    Amazing. After all that expense to the taxpayer in the form of subsidies, we’re still less than 1% of the way there. Meanwhile:

    …However, the MCS Foundation, which oversees the body’s standards scheme, said the UK was still falling short in its goal to reduce its reliance on gas, which is considered a crucial step in meeting Britain’s legally binding climate targets.

    It added that the installation of heat pumps would have increase more than tenfold within the next four years to meet the government target of 600,000 a year by 2028….

    Like

  38. Last year, 39 percent fewer water-based heat pumps were sold compared to the previous year, according to new figures from the Danish Energy Agency.

    This completes a disastrous year for heat pump sales and the necessary green transition of society [sic], says Tekniq Arbejdsgiverne in a press release.

    Like

  39. They’re getting increasingly desperate, it seems:

    Give heat pump users a tax break on bills to encourage uptake, Treasury told

    As so often, Paul sums it up nicely:

    The idea that people are suddenly going to go out and spend fifteen grand on a heat pump, just to save £130 is absurd.

    Still it is good to see that they are now admitting that heat pumps are dearer to run than a gas boiler, something I have been pointing out for ages.

    If a subsidy of £7500 is not enough to persuade people to buy, maybe it is time to drop the whole absurd agenda.

    Liked by 1 person

  40. “Environmentally friendly heat pumps hit slump in Europe, says lobby group
    Sales fell 5% over 14 countries for which data exists, according to the European Heat Pump Association”

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/feb/27/environmentally-friendly-heat-pumps-hit-slump-in-europe-says-lobby-group

    Europe’s heat pump market has hit a slump, industry data shows, holding up the continent’s efforts to heat its homes without polluting the planet.

    Manufacturers in most markets sold fewer heat pumps in 2023 than they did the year before, according to the lobby group European Heat Pump Association (EHPA). Total sales fell 5% over the 14 countries for which data exists, bucking a trend of accelerating growth that peaked in 2022 when Russia’s invasion of Ukraine sent gas prices soaring.

    Thomas Nowak, head of the EHPA, called on the EU to put together a promised action plan to build more heat pumps and install more of them in buildings.

    Heat pumps, which act like refrigerators in reverse, use electricity to move untapped energy indoors. Their sales last year dropped 36% in Italy, 42% in Finland and 46% in Poland as gas prices fell and interest rates rose. Governments in some member states also cut support….

    Like

  41. The Tories do have a death wish – the death of the UK. That’s why they’re engineering their own demise so Starmer’s Labour can take over with a huge and unassailable majority. The parliamentary Uniparty is about to lose its fake veneer of Government and Opposition, which has served it so well over the years to convince gullible voters that there exists a democratic choice and a viable Opposition to the governing party.

    Like

  42. A small article in last week’s Spectator reported:

    The Heat Pump Association estimates there are approx 275,000 in UK homes – c.1% of the total.

    Nearly 37,000 were installed last year (govt figure).

    The mean cost of an ASHP under the Boiler Upgrade Scheme was £13,300 (before grant); for a GSHP the cost was £27,500.

    Those cost figures are likely to be “best case”, aisi, because the industry will naturally focus on the most suitable homes and avoid difficult cases.

    Like

  43. “Most homes will need heat pumps, Welsh government says”

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c51yqvg0z04o

    Heat pumps will need to be installed in the vast majority of Welsh homes to meet climate targets, the Welsh government has said.

    However, the government’s new heat strategy stops short of saying if or when oil and gas boilers will be banned, acknowledging the switch was still “beyond the means” of many.

    It said it would focus on making it easier to opt for the greener tech with financial incentives and changes to planning rules, among other things….

    ...Mr Evans said the effort to install technology such as heat pumps in older properties was likely to be a much bigger challenge.

    “Heat pumps don’t work all the time in existing stock because heat pumps work best in underfloor heating so in existing homes – [it’s a] massive challenge. “

    He said it would take about £30,000 to £50,000 per property to upgrade existing homes to an EPC A rating.

    “You’re talking about billions of pounds,” he said….

    The BBC opened this one up for a “Have Your Say”. By and large, comments are extremely negative.

    Like

  44. “Don’t Fall for the Government’s Latest Heat Pump Con”

    https://dailysceptic.org/2024/07/18/dont-fall-for-the-governments-latest-heat-pump-con/

    One of the great problems facing the policy – proposed by both Labour and Conservative – to decarbonise domestic heat by replacing gas boilers with heat pumps is that it’s fundamentally uneconomic. As I pointed out in a recent paper for GWPF, while air-source heat pumps are, on average, three times as efficient as gas boilers, electricity is four times the price of gas, so unless your installation is much more efficient than the norm, you will not see operating cost reductions from a heat pump, let alone pay back the extra capital cost.

    One of the wheezes dreamt up to address this issue is to remove all the renewables subsidy costs from electricity bills. This has been suggested by the Climate Change Committee today, and the simultaneous picking up of the idea by the BBC and others suggests a fully fledged Green Blob campaign in support of the idea is under way.

    Given that the subsidies are for, well, electricity generation, the policy would further divorce consumer bills from the underlying economic realities, and it would therefore be expected to cause harm to the public at large, but it’s interesting to consider just how much harm....

    ...The installation subsidies and the shifting of renewables levies onto gas bills (if it happens) can only ever be temporary. The installation subsidy is already only available to those replacing gas boilers, of course; next time round, you will pay full whack. Similarly, once everyone has a heat pump, the windfarms are still going to want their subsidies, and so the levies are going to have to go onto electricity bills.

    This means, at some point in the future, the innocents who have, at Mr. Miliband’s prompting, dutifully ripped out their gas boilers in favour of a heat pump, will suddenly find that their bills have soared. The cheap energy prices that lured them in will be gone. And when the time comes to replace the heat pump unit, it will cost many thousands of pounds more than it did the last time round.

    The Government is engaged in a classic bait and switch – possibly the greatest bait-and-switch of all time.

    Don’t fall for it.

    Like

  45. “Heat-Pump Sales Plummet by Almost 50% Across Europe”

    https://dailysceptic.org/2024/09/27/heat-pump-sales-plummet-by-almost-50-across-europe/

    Just 765,000 heat pumps were sold in 2024 across the 13 European countries that represent 80% of the market, the European Heat Pump Association said.

    Over the same period in 2023, 1.44 million heat pumps were sold in countries including France, Italy, Germany and Sweden.

    It means fewer than 1.5 million heat pumps are likely to be sold in 2024, which is the lowest level since 2019.

    Sales were hit by dropping gas prices, which soared after Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine in 2022, wavering government subsidies and the cost of living crisis.

    After the war began, the EU set a target of installing at least 10 million more heat pumps by 2027 as part of efforts to lessen its dependence on Russian gas but a subsequent boom in sales is now over.

    The U.K. Government is reported to be planning to introduce heat-pump targets in Britain next year in what has been branded a “boiler tax” on households.

    Homeowners in countries such as Germany rebelled against government drives to install more of the green technology, which is expensive to set up, during the cost of living crisis.

    Olaf Scholz’s under-fire coalition has since watered down its proposals to make heat pumps compulsory from 2024 in the face of public anger.

    Liked by 1 person

  46. The Department of Energy Insecurity and Net Zero intelligence posted on X today that heat pumps generate three times as much energy as they consume, which would be a miracle because it would mean they are creating energy out of nothing, which violates the law of conservation of energy. But they’re too thick to realise that all that heat pumps do is move energy from the air or ground into your home and they can do that quite economically in terms of energy used. That’s it. Gas boilers are totally different. They generate heat by releasing chemical energy via combustion. This means that they can never be more than 100% efficient and so the comparison to heat pumps, which just move energy from one place to another, is not valid.

    Did you know a heat pump is 3x more efficient than a gas boiler? Meaning it generates 3 times more energy than it consumes. Check if a heat pump could be suitable for your home https://gov.uk/check-heat-pump #HeatPumpWeek

    Liked by 1 person

  47. Gawd help us, Jaime.

    Meanwhile these folks are really busy. I gather that Great British Energy now has a Facebook page. That’ll do it!

    Liked by 1 person

  48. Thanks Mike . Sorry, I have been busy today, and have only just spotted this comment trapped in spam

    Like

  49. Mike,

    Heat pumps use electricity to provide both heating and cooling to buildings . . . . .

    Actually, you can get something called a gas absorption heat pump which runs on gas and doesn’t need a compressor and therefore is a lot quieter than an electric heat pump. They are also more efficient and able to easily heat water to 65C and they use less gas than a high efficiency condensing gas boiler to deliver the same amount of heat. They can run on natural gas (methane) or liquefied petroleum gas, meaning that you could even use them in areas with no mains gas supply. Much better I would have thought than going for the costly and inefficient solution of installing an electric heat pump and a gas boiler.

    The gas fitter has suggested that my old gas boiler doesn’t need replacing after all, so why spend money installing a new one? If the time comes when it does need replacing though, I’m seriously thinking about installing a Robur k18 heat pump.

    https://www.roburheatpumps.co.uk/products/heating-only/robur-k18-mini-air-source/

    Like

  50. “Stop pushing heat pumps or face major backlash, green energy magnate tells Labour

    Party donor Dale Vince warns that urging homeowners to switch to clean-power technology risks political storm bigger than Ulez”

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/oct/12/stop-pushing-heat-pumps-backlash-green-energy-magnate-labour-ulez

    The government risks a huge political backlash if it keeps pushing the public to install heat pumps to replace their boilers, one of Britain’s leading green entrepreneurs has warned.Dale Vince, a major Labour donor and renewable energy advocate, called on Keir Starmer to rethink national programmes, championed by Boris Johnson, pushing the technology.

    Vince argued that Whitehall should explore alternatives to the devices, which he said were expensive, caused serious disruption and could end up increasing energy bills for some people.

    Like

  51. “We were left out in the cold over a faulty heat pump installation

    Trying to get some redress from green energy installers when things go wrong is a long, hard slog”

    https://www.theguardian.com/money/2024/oct/21/we-were-left-out-in-the-cold-over-a-faulty-heat-pump-installation

    Two years ago I signed a £14,409 contract for a heat pump installation and paid the deposit. Three weeks after the pump was fitted, the company that installed it, Omni Heat and Power, went into liquidation. It had been due to return to repair damage to the pump’s casing, and I had not yet paid the balance. I paid the pump manufacturer Grant Engineering UK to do the repairs and, as I had not received the promised seven-year guarantee from Omni, I decided to purchase an extended warranty from Grant.

    Within two months, the pump developed a fault and kept switching off, leaving us without heating or hot water. Several technician visits and a £1,000 flushing of the system did not help. Grant Engineering blamed the installation rather than the equipment, and refused to honour the warranty or advise on remedies.

    It seems heat pump installers and manufacturers are not in an integrated supply chain as for a gas boiler system, and customers with a problem can be left with nowhere to turn if the installer goes bust.

    Like

  52. Jaime: apologies, I’ve only just spotted* your post of Oct 7th about gas absorption heat pumps – very interesting. I’m guessing they are more expensive than a standard boiler but, if they really are so much more economic to run than a condensing boiler, the savings when replacing an old boiler should give a quick payback.

    I replaced my 20+ year old boiler a couple of years ago with a new condensing one. The gas savings have been significant.

    *Am I alone in finding it hard to return to threads once they drop off the front page? Some of the titles are a bit cryptic!

    Like

  53. Mike H,

    That’s encouraging news about the gas savings. Our old gas boiler (a third of a century old) has just given up the ghost and we are having a new condensing boiler fitted right now. 😊

    Like

  54. Mike H, this isn’t fundamental of course, but it’s worrying. The absence (so far as I can see) of this story being reported by the BBC and the Guardian is rather glaring and problematic too.

    Like

  55. “Gas Boilers Banned in New Homes From 2027”

    https://dailysceptic.org/2024/11/11/gas-boilers-banned-in-new-homes-from-2027/

    …Currently only about 35,000 heat pumps are installed each year. Boosting that to 300,000 a year, nearly 10 times more, in three years seems like a stretch. The bigger problem of course is that people don’t like heat pumps because they don’t heat the house or water very well and, with electricity prices high, are not cheap to run.

    Liked by 1 person

  56. Mark; “Boosting that to 300,000 a year, nearly 10 times more, in three years seems like a stretch.” That’s quite an understatement! I very much doubt there are anywhere near the numbers of qualified installers needed, nor the supply chain, to support such an expansion.

    Also, for a new-build, it may well be preferable to choose air-to-air systems rather than air-to-water, as used in retrofits. Afaik there is very little experience of that technology in the UK.

    Like

  57. “Heat pump scheme for Edwardian social housing aims to bust low-carbon myths

    The Sutton Dwellings estate in London may offer councils a ‘blueprint’ for ground source heating”

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/nov/18/heat-pump-scheme-for-edwardian-social-housing-aims-to-bust-low-carbon-myths

    Some of the earliest examples of purpose-built social housing in the UK can still be found tucked away along central London’s more affluent streets. Built in Edwardian baroque style, the Sutton Dwellings in Chelsea are perhaps an unlikely site for an innovative scheme at the new frontier of Britain’s low-carbon journey.

    This winter more than 80 of the estate’s flats will be warmed by heat pumps that tap the warmth of the earth well below the streets of central London.

    The scheme’s 27 boreholes burrow deep into the ground directly beneath the estate to where piped water is warmed and fed to a network of “shoebox” heat pumps in a cupboard in each flat. Here, each heat pump – roughly the size of a gas boiler – tops up the heat of the water pipes so that each household can control their own heating, setting it to their preference or using thermostats.

    The scheme was completed in late autumn as part of a refurbishment of the more than 100-year-old block of flats, confounding the myths around the UK’s heat pump roll out, such as claims that they do not work in older buildings. It aims to show that heat pumps are not only for newer buildings and that ground source heat pumps are not only for homes with extensive outdoor space….

    I see at least three unanswered questions here. First, we aren’t told what the capital cost was. Second, we aren’t told what the running costs will be, and how much – if anything – might be saved by the residents of the flats. Both pieces of information are vital to enable an intelligent assessment as to whether this makes financial sense. Third, maybe it’s just me, but I found the choice of language to be rather strange: “…each heat pump – roughly the size of a gas boiler – tops up the heat of the water pipes so that each household can control their own heating…”. Does that mean that the ground-source heat pump is the sole method of heating, or is it topping-up some other heat source?

    At least the Guardian did call out some other issues (not that you would guess it from their relentlessly upbeat headlines about net zero, heat pumps etc – you have to read well into any Guardian article to discover that their might be caveats:

    ...Less than two miles from Sutton Dwellings at the Lillington Gardens estate in Pimlico, residents are deeply sceptical. Here, leaseholders have been warned by Westminster city council that they could face bills of between £30,000 and £66,000 each to replace its buckling heat network. The council has proposed a low-carbon scheme that would cost up to £185m and help the local authority reach its target of becoming net zero by 2030.

    In the 1960s, the Lillington heat network was once at the vanguard of low-carbon home heating, making use of the waste heat emitted by miles of underground pipes from the nearby Battersea power station. Since then the network has come to rely on centrally located gas boilers and has fallen into disrepair, leaving residents to battle burst pipes, hot water leaks and sewage spills.

    The Labour-led council has blamed “historic underinvestment” for the failure of the heat network and said it is costing £3.5m a year in insurance to manage the “constant leaks that have negatively affected the lives of residents”. The councillor Liza Begum said the council was working with residents to urgently find a long-term solution, and reduce the costs for residents and leaseholders...

    …Households connected to communal or district heat networks are often paying twice as much for their heat as those with their own gas boiler, according to Heat Trust. The consumer champion for heat network users has urged the government to help lower their costs by bringing in two reforms: first to extend the energy price cap to include homes connected to a heat network, and second, to provide support to help cover the costs of repairing old heat networks….

    Like

  58. “Government to relax noise restrictions on heat pumps for net zero

    Ed Miliband’s department also lifting size limit on unsightly boxes”

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/11/21/government-to-relax-noise-restrictions-on-heat-pumps/

    Noise restrictions on heat pumps are to be relaxed in the pursuit of net zero…

    Behind the Telegraph paywall, unfortunately, but the headlines tells us enough. If only this mad government was as focused on sorting out the economy and the myriad other problems the country faces as it is on throwing the kitchen sink at net zero and ruining our lives in the process. I see they’re pressing ahead with the boiler tax, too. Thank goodness we’ve just had a new gas boiler installed (and recently purchased a new diesel car).

    Liked by 2 people

  59. Mark; aiui, they are persisting with the boiler tax but the fines will be cut back to £500 per boiler “oversold”, down from £5000 originally which was later reduced to £3000.

    I am waiting for the whole policy to run aground when capacity limitations in local distribution networks start restricting the installation of heat pumps – and EV chargers for that matter.

    Like

  60. Noise restrictions on heat pumps are to be relaxed in the pursuit of net zero.

    Ministers have said they will scrap current rules that block homeowners from installing a heat pump less than a metre from their property’s boundary.

    The requirement was introduced because the systems can produce a loud buzzing noise of up to 60 decibels that can annoy neighbours.

    The Government will also lift the limit on size of the unsightly boxes and pour more money into subsidising them.

    Ed Miliband’s department, which announced the changes, said they were part of plans to deliver an extra 300,000 home upgrades next year.

    Ministers are doubling next year’s funding for a subsidies scheme that allows families to claim up to £7,500 towards the cost of a new heat pump.

    So, your neighbour will not need planning permission to install a noisy condenser fan right next to the boundary with your property and they will be given £7500 from your taxes to pay towards it! Whilst you are sitting in bed at night, unable to sleep because of the noise of the fan running constantly on a cold, still evening, this will give you something to think about. The only way you might get some sleep is if the council deems the installation to be a statutory noise nuisance, which is a very hit and miss procedure, depending on the council, and if your council is fully signed up to the declaration of a ‘climate emergency’ you haven’t got a hope in hell of obtaining a legally binding noise abatement order. So you build a 15 foot high brick wall and the council tell you to take it down!

    Liked by 2 people

  61. Or you install a grass sprinkler system which is much needed in UK winters & just happens to be near the neighbours heat pump.

    Like

  62. “Parliament Heat Pump Drive Suspended Over “Noise Complaints””

    https://dailysceptic.org/2025/02/16/parliament-heat-pump-drive-suspended-over-noise-complaints/

    Parliament has quietly shelved its heat pump rollout over noise and power concerns – despite Labour insisting the rest of Britain must adopt them!

    The Telegraph has the story.There are three air source heat pumps in the House of Commons buildings, but no new installations have been made since 2022, according to data released under the Freedom of Information Act.

    And a report – seen by the the Telegraph – into the feasibility of installing a new heat pump into the modern office block, Portcullis House, raised significant concerns over their acoustics and power supply.

    It has plunged Labour into a fresh hypocrisy row as opposition MPs said it was proof heat pumps “don’t work” – despite the Government’s push to install them into residential homes.

    Richard Tice, Reform MP, said: “Parliament has installed three heat pumps, and every one of them has faced complaints for consuming too much electricity and generating excessive noise.“

    Despite this, Labour pushes ahead with forcing the rest of us to adopt them, while refusing to use heat pumps themselves.

    ”One parliamentary staffer said that Portcullis House was “always freezing”, and that their colleagues often complained about their working conditions….

    Liked by 1 person

  63. “Heat pump sales in Europe fall 23% to pre-Ukraine war levels

    Growth in 2022 and 2023 was driven by soaring gas prices caused by Russia’s invasion, but 2024 saw sales slump”

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/feb/18/heat-pump-sales-in-europe-fall-23-to-pre-ukraine-war-levels

    Heat pump sales fell 23% in Europe last year, industry data shows, reverting to the level they were at before the war in Ukraine and slowing the shift away from gas-burning boilers.

    Demand for clean heating devices fell by about half in Belgium and Germany, and by 39% in France, according to data for 13 countries that cover 85% of the European heat pump market.

    The only country to buck the trend was the UK, where sales rose 63% between 2023 and 2024….

    ...“The very strong growth that appeared in 2022 and 2023 – war-related and gas price-related – didn’t have a foundation in robust policy,” said Paul Kenny, director general of the European Heat Pump Association (EHPA)….

    ...The EHPA said the fall in sales in 2024 was driven by political uncertainty and changes to support schemes in a handful of key markets, as well as a sluggish economy leading to an overall drop in heating installations.

    Analysts said the shift could be a rebound effect after two unusually good years for the industry but struggled to explain the scale of the drop….

    The slump has also hit manufacturers. The EHPA said the heat pump sector has invested billions in additional capacity since the start of the war but “much of this capacity now lies idle”. It estimated at least 4,000 jobs have been cut, and a further 6,000 workers face reduced hours or other impacts.

    It called on the European Commission and national governments to put heat pumps at the centre of the clean industrial deal next week, which seeks to align the EU’s climate, competitiveness and geopolitics goals.

    It’s the same old story. Heat pumps would fly off the shelves if they represented value for money and an improvement. They sell in any numbers at all only if they are foisted on the public and if subsidised by other taxpayers.

    Liked by 2 people

  64. “My Neighbour’s Heat Pump is So Noisy We Can’t Sleep and the Doctor Says it’s Making My Mum’s Disability Worse”

    https://dailysceptic.org/2025/02/19/my-neighbours-heat-pump-is-so-noisy-we-cant-sleep-and-the-doctor-says-it-is-making-my-mums-disability-worse/

    …Anna’s next-door-but-one neighbour installed the device on an exterior wall of her property in December 2023.

    But Anna claims the heat pump has been emitting a “horrible” vibrating noise ever since, which is having a “terrible psychological effect” on her and her mother.

    It comes as experts have warned that Labour’s push to the eco-devices risks a slew of noise complaints in built-up areas that will turn neighbourhoods into “war zones”.

    The Government last year relaxed planning permission on heat pumps, which can create a buzzing noise of up to 60 decibels, roughly the equivalent of a restaurant or an office.

    Exasperated homeowners told the Telegraph that they had taken legal action against neighbours, and were planning to sell their homes to escape the “unbearable” hum.

    Liked by 2 people

  65. Unfortunately, this lady and her elderly mother are not MPs:

    Anna, 58, is a former nurse who retired to care for her elderly mother.

    The two live together in a detached house in a small town in the East Midlands – one of half a dozen properties dotted in the grounds of an old vicarage.

    It’s an idyllic spot, apart from one thing – a noisy nearby heat pump making their lives “a misery”.

    Anna’s next-door-but-one neighbour installed the device on an exterior wall of her property in December 2023.

    But Anna claims the heat pump has been emitting a “horrible” vibrating noise ever since, which is having a “terrible psychological effect” on her and her mother.

    Anna said: “It’s disrupting our sleep. I put my head on the pillow and I hear a reverberating tone.

    “Then it starts humming and thumping and can go quiet for a few seconds, then starts up again. It’s unpredictable – that’s the worst thing.”

    She is particularly worried about the effect the noise is having on her 87-year-old mother.

    “We always wake up at 5am. If my mum hasn’t slept, she doesn’t want to walk, and this makes her hip worse which she broke three years ago.

    “She’s so exhausted. The noise is making her disability worse.

    Reverberation is a factor that Anna believes heat pump manufacturers and installers have overlooked. There is a property in between Anna’s house and the home of the neighbour with the heat pump.

    But while Anna’s immediate neighbour is barely affected by the noise and vibrations from the heat pump, Anna is – despite being 100 metres away from the device.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/net-zero/no-sleep-night-neighbour-noisy-heat-pump/

    I did an MSc in environmental acoustics. I think what’s happening here is that the surrounding properties have set up a resonant standing wave pattern generated by the noise from this heat pump and Anna’s house is unfortunately situated at an antinode (point of maximum amplitude). Her immediate neighbour’s property is conversely, a node (point of minimum amplitude). She could try erecting a wall or something to break up the standing wave but then her immediate neighbour might get the brunt of the noise! The best solution is to ban noisy heat pumps.

    Liked by 2 people

  66. According to Energy Voice:

    “Heat pumps to be sold with ‘smart’ function under plans to save households money”

    Yeah, right….clearly a euphemism for controlling demand.

    Like

  67. Mike, I thought they had to run constantly!

    I do like the Orwellian language. Double plus good.

    Like

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