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Eco-energy grants go through the roof

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Published Date: 16 December 2007
IT COULD be just the eye-watering expense of electricity but it may be that Scotland's house-owners are embracing a greener way of life.
The take-up of grants for home-based renewable energy devices that will cut bills and help to prevent damaging climate change have soared by 1,000% during the past four years.

According to a survey by the Energy Saving Trust (EST), householders n
orth of the Border have invested more than £18.8m in renewable technologies since 2003, with the figure rising every month.

That translates to 2,300 grants, funded by the Scottish Government, to homeowners installing devices such as solar panels to produce hot water, ground-source heat pumps, wood-burning biomass boilers, or wind turbines.

Grants awarded have rocketed from just 85 in the period April 1, 2003, when the scheme began, to March 31, 2004, to 894 from April 1, 2006, to March 31, 2007, a rise of more than 1,000%.

Since April 1, the Scottish Community and Householder Renewables Initiative has awarded 751 grants to energy-efficient Scots. The EST, which administers the scheme, says it is confident it will break its 2006-7 figure by the end of March.

The grants are for 30% of the costs of installing any renewable technology around the home. Grants are capped at £4,000 and limited to two per household.



Scottish Renewables manager Chris Morris said: "The rate of growth has been impressive and we suspect greater than in the rest of the UK. Scots homeowners really want to take positive action to tackle climate change."



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1

Margaret L,

Edinburgh 16/12/2007 10:10:54
This is just peanuts - the big boys with their wind farms are currently getting £130 million a year subsidy with the recent announcement by the Scottish Government that it is to rise to £780 million a year by 2020.
2

truthsleuth,

South of the Border 16/12/2007 12:00:49
With increasing fuel prices most of this 'investment' would have been made anyway. Its a waste of taxpayers money and simply enables trhe Government to claim 'they are doing somethimg'.
The truth of course is THEY are avoiding doing anything and taking the real decisions.
3

Robbierunciman,

Romney Marsh 16/12/2007 14:37:10
#1, is correct, these grants are underfunded, ~2 os also correct, they are avoiding real decisions. There are many in BERR who grew up in the 1950's still wedded to nuclear power - in spite of the evidence to the contrary on its efficiency and suitability. This industry still recieves the real big bucks, £130m would hardly cover the overhead on decommissioning a single station. Ask the Finns about the benefits of investing in this redundant technology.

As an experiment, I would like to see the Government devote the likley budget (the real one with cost over-runs and not the fantasy one that they use to justify building it) of a nuclear powerstation devoted to renewables. The money could go to enhancing ROCS (in new sources such as tidal, increasing the grants to homeowners and underwriting the cost of introducing a feed in tariff. That would soon develop the sector.
4

Unimpressed one,

16/12/2007 15:57:42
#3, better still build the nuclear station and scrap the renewables. There is no shortage of uranium, nuclear is safe (just ask the French) and compared to wind and tide, infinitely more reliable.

 

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