Also adds ~100K to cost of new build for customer (which I think is to much), and this is without any battery included, would have thought ideal to pair with solar.
It's not even clear absolute success would be a net good for English energy. I know almost nothing about English energy, except that it delivers a very expensive product to its customers. In my ignorance, I'd be willing to bet that if England deployed, say, 88GW of solar (Germany's rough numbers), we would be reading about English energy companies requiring bailouts, and then likely increased per kwh charges, given how the regulation / economic management seems to work.
Comments below say that it's 100k GBP to add heat pumps to homes, which I am very, very surprised by. In the Pacific Northwest where I live, a heat pump retrofit is on the order of $18k or 13k GBP. American power costs roughly 1/3 what English power costs on average, and I get that there's therefore a larger savings incentive, and therefore more profit available to installers, but this seems egregious. Y'all, what's happening over there?
And it was still a good idea when the Conservatives short sightedly scrapped it in 2015 along with other "green crap" that would have saved the country Billions.
And it's still a good idea now.
People claiming in comments here that it costs 100K for a heat pump in a brand new house suggest this has entered the culture war insanity stage where facts no longer matter.
The regulations for new houses have been slowly updated but as with anything the tug of war on policy helps no one and long term planning would have been better.
redwoodsec•12h ago