Monday 19 September 2011

Electric cars cut solar payback times in half

Electric car drivers could slash the payback time of installing solar panels to under five years.

Figures are based upon a 2.52kWp system installed on a domestic property, the panels are used to charge a Nissan LEAF.

Since installing the £11,500 system three months ago, the panels have generated enough energy to power 2,290 miles of the 2,680 miles driven during that time – around 85 per cent.

It costs about £150 to drive 1,000 miles in a petrol car and £37.10 in an electric car, but using figures for this solar-powered electric car, the same distance costs just £5.38.

If the average driver travels 12,000 miles a year, an electric car owner with a similar-sized solar system would spend under £65 on a year's motoring, saving £1,736 on petrol costs as well as raking in £1,055 worth of feed-in tariff payments.

These combined annual benefits mean the £11,500 system should pay for itself in around four and a half years rather than the average 10 years.

Through solar-generated energy, the public can significantly cut their fuel costs and help reduce Britain's carbon footprint. Solar-charged vehicles have real potential on our roads, and from the moment the panels are installed the public can begin to reap benefits.

Urban Energy

Urban Energy are delighted that nearly half the population would like to install renewable energy technologies; what worries us is the lack of awareness surrounding it. To bridge the Green Gap it’s essential we continue to educate consumers and break down some of the myths surrounding the Green Deal, energy efficiency and microgeneration.

Urban Energy has earned a reputation as the south’s leading renewable energy specialist. This has been achieved by ensuring that from the initial point of client contact we offer 1st class customer service and care.
We only install products that lead the way within the renewable energy industry and that are renowned for their high quality and ecologically sound production. This reflects our own high standards and quality assurance.

We understand that introducing a renewable energy system to either your home or business is an investment that lasts for many years. With our in-house electrical and plumbing division it is our promise to you the customer that your satisfaction and peace of mind throughout this period is our number one priority.

For further information about Urban Energy products and services:
Call: 0800 232 1624

Wednesday 14 September 2011

Energy prices set to grow by up to 37% by 2020

Renewable energy could make average returns of 11-12%, with the potential for returns in excess of 20%. According to the findings, new financial incentives, energy market trends and building regulations are combining to create a compelling case for UK businesses to generate their own renewable energy.

With energy prices set to grow by up to 37% by 2020, the opportunity to reduce utility bills is a strong incentive for investigating renewable energy options. Government initiatives such as Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) and Feed in Tariff (FiT), which are also designed to act as incentives for businesses to act quickly and benefit from the capped level of funding on offer.

The Carbon Trust Advisory conducted interviews with leading companies to find out about the challenges, opportunities and best practice associated with implementing renewable energy measures. The industries with the most to gain are utilities, manufacturing, retail, hospitality and agricultural sectors.

Retailers and consumer goods brands are tending to lead the way. ASDA, IKEA, John Lewis and Marks & Spencer have all set a target of moving to 100% renewable energy. The Carbon Trust Advisory analysis of the results shows that businesses are taking a mixed approach to sourcing renewable energy from either their own projects or purchases from energy providers. One business which has made strong progress in this area is IKEA. The furniture retailer now obtains 80% of its total energy use for renewable and has invested in a mix of ground source heat pumps, biomass, solar panels and wind power.

Charlie Browne, IKEA UK and Ireland Sustainability Manager, explains: “Taking care of people and the environment is integral to how we do business, so we are continually working to significantly reduce our carbon footprint from all parts of our operations. As part of our global ‘IKEA Goes Renewable’ programme, we are committed to heavily investing in making IKEA buildings more energy efficient and using more renewable energy. For example, our most recently built UK based stores in Coventry, Southampton and Dublin have been designed to incorporate measures that will have a major impact on these areas, including geothermal heating and cooling systems, biomass boilers and improved insulation. Our recent investment into a 12.3 Megawatt wind farm in Aberdeenshire and a £4million investment to fit over 39,000 photovoltaic (solar) panels to the rooftops of 10 IKEA stores shows our clear actions to reach our goal of 100% renewable energy supply.”

Commenting on the report, Hugh Jones, Managing Director, Carbon Trust Advisory, said: “This report should help convince more UK businesses to move to renewable energy. However, selecting the right strategy for renewable energy can be a complex area and we recommend that businesses make a staged approach to adoption. This includes trialling different measures, testing their viability and doing this sooner rather than later before energy price increases and regulatory pressure become more pressing.”

Reference: Carbon Trust - full report can be downloaded here:

http://www.carbontrust.co.uk/Publications/pages/publicationdetail.aspx?id=CTA004

Urban Energy

Urban Energy are delighted that nearly half the population would like to install renewable energy technologies; what worries us is the lack of awareness surrounding it. To bridge the Green Gap it’s essential we continue to educate consumers and break down some of the myths surrounding the Green Deal, energy efficiency and microgeneration.

Urban Energy has earned a reputation as the south’s leading renewable energy specialist. This has been achieved by ensuring that from the initial point of client contact we offer 1st class customer service and care.
We only install products that lead the way within the renewable energy industry and that are renowned for their high quality and ecologically sound production. This reflects our own high standards and quality assurance.

We understand that introducing a renewable energy system to either your home or business is an investment that lasts for many years. With our in-house electrical and plumbing division it is our promise to you the customer that your satisfaction and peace of mind throughout this period is our number one priority.

For further information about Urban Energy products and services:
Call: 0800 232 1624

Tuesday 13 September 2011

UK solar panel installation hotspots revealed

Small-scale energy generation using solar panels or wind turbines has grown by 400% in less than 18 months in the UK, with Sheffield seeing the biggest increase in renewable installations per 1,000 people.

The new study looked at the growth in renewable energy capacity in the UK's large cities since the government's feed-in tariff (FIT) launched last April. The scheme offers guaranteed cash payments to households and communities who produce their own electricity.

Top of the table was Sheffield, which increased its renewable energy capacity, of which 99% is solar, to more than 3.5 kilowatts electrical per 1,000 people (kWe is a measure of electrical power). Here's the top 10:

1. Sheffield

2. Leeds

3. Bristol

4. Bradford

5. Birmingham

6. London

7. Liverpool

8. Edinburgh

9. Manchester

10. Glasgow

London added more renewable power than all the other cities, but only ranked sixth on the list when the data was assessed per head.

Solar panels on the rise

Solar panels are the most popular way of generating renewable power, accounting for 75% of feed-in tariff scheme payments, according to the study by energy consultancy AEA. Wind power accounts for 14%.

So far, more than 44,000 solar installations have been registered for the FIT, with small domestic systems making up the majority (38,300).

Overall, Cornwall is the area which generates the most solar photovoltaic (PV) power in the UK, with more than 1,000 solar installations and three megawatts electrical (MWe) capacity. Aberdeenshire generates the most wind power and Perth and Kinross the most hydro electricity.

Solar power benefits

Urban Energy research has found it is possible to make up to £38,000 profit from a 4kWp solar photovoltaic (PV) system over 25 years, under the FIT – the pay back can be as little as 6 years. To qualify you must use products and installers registered under the Microgeneration Certification Scheme (MCS).

This data shows that you do not need to live on the equator to generate electricity from solar panels. The UK has enough daylight to generate good returns. If you are considering cashing in on the generous FIT scheme, we would advise you do so before April 2012, since the tariff is likely to be changed then, most probably decreasing slightly.

Urban Energy

Urban Energy are delighted that nearly half the population would like to install renewable energy technologies; what worries us is the lack of awareness surrounding it. To bridge the Green Gap it’s essential we continue to educate consumers and break down some of the myths surrounding the Green Deal, energy efficiency and microgeneration.

Urban Energy has earned a reputation as the south’s leading renewable energy specialist. This has been achieved by ensuring that from the initial point of client contact we offer 1st class customer service and care.
We only install products that lead the way within the renewable energy industry and that are renowned for their high quality and ecologically sound production. This reflects our own high standards and quality assurance.
We understand that introducing a renewable energy system to either your home or business is an investment that lasts for many years. With our in-house electrical and plumbing division it is our promise to you the customer that your satisfaction and peace of mind throughout this period is our number one priority.
For further information about Urban Energy products and services:
Call: 0800 232 1624

Sunday 11 September 2011

Is solar the future for energy production?

It is no longer credible to say that solar can’t play a major role in a sustainable energy mix. Deutsche Bahn intends to run the entire German railway system on wind, solar and hydropower. The German economics ministry has collaborated with German companies to run a scaled model of the national economy on a real mix of renewables, including solar, and concluded that a healthy modern economy could be run on renewables, including baseload electricity. In a report due out later this year, the International Energy Agency will admit that solar can provide 60% of global electricity by 2060.

It is not good enough to say, as some do, that if a global mass market is inevitable, the UK should sit back and partake come the day, not before. This is a strategic miscalculation. We do not want to be importing every aspect of our energy infrastructure ad infinitum. National security considerations such as peak oil increasingly demand that we have domestic industries that are as stand-alone as humanly possible.

In this respect there should be many opportunities for the government. The prime minister has emphasised the Big Society idea as a flagship programme of his tenure, and he envisions many of the jobs that must countervail the austerity measures will come from British participation in the green industrial revolution that he says is unfoldling around the world. Solar is an important part of that. Ask the Chinese. In 2000 they had little solar. Now every second solar cell is made in China. The government would not have to do much to fashion a Big Society/green industrial revolution case-history worth boasting about.

Around the nation, as things stand, thousands of jobs are being created in the embryonic British solar industry. Tens of thousands of citizens are in the process of being empowered in community projects. The cause of this is a solar-energy feed-in tariff: a market-enablement process used by over 40 countries around the world that entails premium pricing for solar photovoltaic (PV) electricity funded by a small levy on all energy bills. With its feed-in tariff introduced in April last year, the UK has belatedly joining the party in one of the fastest growing markets of any kind globally.

The opportunities extend well beyond solar. Solar generation would soon be marriable at scale with the energy efficiency measures due to be stimulated by the government’s Green Deal. Innovative integrated energy-services financing would become possible, unleashing substantial net energy cost savings.
Feed-in tariffs are supposed to decrease annually, as solar prices fall. That is part of their inate attraction. Unlike nuclear, solar does not need subsidising forever. But the staged reductions in tariff, down to zero within the decade, have to match the market. It is no good introducing sudden deep cuts. That stalls a market, as a number of governments have discovered this year.

The first reductions for UK rooftop solar PV tariffs will begin in April 2012, and are under review right now. The government has to get this just right. Reductions in tariff have to be deep enough to fairly reflect falling solar prices, and not too deep to stall the development of a domestic UK solar industry.

Ministers like Greg Barker and Chris Huhne understand. Others do not. They listen to the calls of the nuclear and gas industries, who among others lobby to slow or kill the solar rollout in multiple countries by cutting feed-in tariffs to the bone. In France, for example, the nuclear industry has all but emasculated the French solar feed in tariff, and hence market.

Creating a Big Society/green-industrial-revolution case-history worth bragging about will involve the government creating a smooth glide path to solar grid parity in electricity markets. This in turn will involve not listening to many of the lobbyists working for the big energy companies, and many civil servants too. They are too wedded to the past, and cannot see what Silicon Valley investors, and the Chinese see.

Urban Energy

Urban Energy are delighted that nearly half the population would like to install renewable energy technologies; what worries us is the lack of awareness surrounding it. To bridge the Green Gap it’s essential we continue to educate consumers and break down some of the myths surrounding the Green Deal, energy efficiency and microgeneration.

Urban Energy has earned a reputation as the south’s leading renewable energy specialist. This has been achieved by ensuring that from the initial point of client contact we offer 1st class customer service and care.
We only install products that lead the way within the renewable energy industry and that are renowned for their high quality and ecologically sound production. This reflects our own high standards and quality assurance.

We understand that introducing a renewable energy system to either your home or business is an investment that lasts for many years. With our in-house electrical and plumbing division it is our promise to you the customer that your satisfaction and peace of mind throughout this period is our number one priority.

For further information about Urban Energy products and services:
Call: 0800 232 1624

Sunday 4 September 2011

Lack of information preventing UK homes from going green

A recent survey has revealed that UK residents are reluctant to install green technology due to a lack of awareness about the related cost savings and government incentives.

This lack of awareness – the ‘Green Gap’ – is holding back the uptake of renewable energy sources in UK homes, according to the report. Whilst 61% of participants were keen to install systems such as solar panels and biomass-fuelled heating, 57% said they wouldn’t consider installing any of the listed renewable technologies, because they viewed them as too expensive.

Of the 2,000 survey participants, a third didn’t know how much money they could save or earn by generating their own energy, whilst 65% were completely unaware of the government’s Feed-in Tariff programme.

This programme requires energy suppliers to pay households that generate their own electricity from renewable sources, and also allows any surplus energy to be sold back to the National Grid.

The survey also revealed considerable confusion surrounding the government’s Green Deal, with 54% unable to correctly identify the Deal’s focus on energy efficiency incentives. 14% thought it was concerned with the protection of forests, while 9% believed it was aimed at increasing the use of electric vehicles.

Urban Energy

Urban Energy are delighted that nearly half the population would like to install renewable energy technologies; what worries us is the lack of awareness surrounding it. To bridge the Green Gap it’s essential we continue to educate consumers and break down some of the myths surrounding the Green Deal, energy efficiency and microgeneration.

Urban Energy has earned a reputation as the south’s leading renewable energy specialist. This has been achieved by ensuring that from the initial point of client contact we offer 1st class customer service and care.
We only install products that lead the way within the renewable energy industry and that are renowned for their high quality and ecologically sound production. This reflects our own high standards and quality assurance.

We understand that introducing a renewable energy system to either your home or business is an investment that lasts for many years. With our in-house electrical and plumbing division it is our promise to you the customer that your satisfaction and peace of mind throughout this period is our number one priority.

For further information about Urban Energy products and services:
Call: 0800 232 1624

PV & Feed in Tariff (FIT) - self fund or rent-a-roof option?

Everyone engaged in property matters will have come across the installation of photovoltaic (PV) solar panels, in order to reduce electricity consumption from the grid and to take advantage of Government’s feed- in-tariff (FiT) scheme. Social landlords and local authorities are making moves to undertake feasibilities and to commission installations. A key issue for their feasibility thinking is whether to self-fund installations or to do so via a third party, also known as the ‘rent-a-roof’ option.

How does each option work?
Self funding is on the face of it very simple, the property owner might choose to finance it with cash (savings) or a loan. Indeed with interest rates on savings and other ‘low risk’ investments so low, using spare cash to fund smaller PV installation and then collecting the FiTs that are generated from it, represent very good rates of return. However, larger installations may require the owner to borrow part of or all of the sums required to finance the installation. In such circumstances, with lending costs around 4-5%, this still represents a viable option, with typical PV installations giving returns of approximately 10% per year for 25 years - very attractive in today's market.

Rent-a-roof is a mechanism to facilitate funding of the upfront installation by a third party.  An investor will provide the funds necessary to undertake the installation; in return the investor will receive the vast majority of the FiT proceeds. This is established by the property owner granting a lease to the investor for the roof space, upon which the installation is fitted. The investors will typically be looking for returns in excess of other relatively low risk investments.

Assessing Feasibility
The starting point for any property owner thinking of installing PV panels through the rent-a-roof scheme is to contact the third party who will establish which properties are suitable, what the expected capital costs are and what revenue may be generated. The usual starting point is to undertake a desktop study where each property is assessed, via web-based imagery, such as Google Earth, to determine the suitability of the property for a PV installation. If the third party deems that they can make a good return on their investment they will send a sales team to validate the Google Earth survey by on-site surveys. The financial feasibility of any particular installation is a reflection of the electricity that it will generate.

This can be calculated for each property, by reference to:

- The size of the proposed installation
- The efficiency of the panels to be installed
- The expected amount of daylight hours that a property should be exposed to over the course of a year
- The orientation of the property, relative to South.

An algorithm will then calculate the amount of electricity that the installation should produce and hence the overall ‘income’ that is derived, made up of three things:

1) The tariff paid for the generation of the electricity
2) The tariff paid for selling surplus electricity back to the grid
3) The saving that the property occupier makes on using the generated electricity.

It would be usual to produce a cash-flow forecast, which would include the initial cost of installation and the forecasted ‘income’ over 25 years.

The forecast allows the property owner to:
- Assess in cash terms the revenue that would be generated.
- Assess the ‘attractiveness’ of the return, relative to other options.
- Determine if self funding or rent-a-roof might be the best option.
- The potential impact on the value of the property.
- The impact on others with an interest in the property.

The practical consequences of giving a long-term lease interest over the roof of the property, in the rent-a-roof option, must be carefully considered. While the lease will identify who has what rights and responsibilities, the involvement of a third party in the property will be an added complication, for example where maintenance has to be done to the roof, for home insurance quotes or potentially when the property is to be rented out or sold on.

- Where the property is tenanted, the lease or tenancy agreement may need changing to facilitate granting a lease under the rent-a-roof option.

Urban Energy

Urban Energy has earned a reputation as the south’s leading renewable energy specialist. This has been achieved by ensuring that from the initial point of client contact we offer 1st class customer service and care.
We only install products that lead the way within the renewable energy industry and that are renowned for their high quality and ecologically sound production. This reflects our own high standards and quality assurance.

We understand that introducing a renewable energy system to either your home or business is an investment that lasts for many years. With our in-house electrical and plumbing division it is our promise to you the customer that your satisfaction and peace of mind throughout this period is our number one priority.

For further information about Urban Energy products and services:
Call: 0800 232 1624

Funding in England - Funding for Energy Efficiency Measures in Private and Social Housing


Carbon Emissions Reduction Target (CERT)

CERT is statutory obligation on the six largest energy suppliers to deliver energy efficiency improvements in housing. Funding is available for various measures including insulation, heating upgrades and renewables. Funding under CERT will be available until December 2012.

Community Energy Saving Programme CESP

Is a new £350 million programme that will target households in designated areas of deprivation across Great Britain. CESP will promote a whole-house approach to energy efficiency and will be funded by the energy suppliers and generators.

Eaga Partnership Charitable Trust

The aim of this fund is the relief of fuel poverty and the promotion of energy efficiency. Priority will be given to projects which focus on fuel poverty and health, hard to heat homes and rural fuel poverty. Applications are based on merit and there is no minimum or maximum limit to the grant.

Regional Growth Fund

The Regional Growth Fund aims to promote long term growth and employment in the private sector across England. It is open to private-public partnerships and private bodies. It is administered by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills and is open for first round applications from now until the 21st of January 2011.

European Regional Development Fund

Available through Regional Development Agencies this funding is aimed at innovation and knowledge transfer, enterprise, sustainable development and building sustainable communities. In England 3.2bn Euros has been allocated for the period 2007-13. 
              
Landlords Energy Saving Allowance

The Landlords Energy Saving Allowance (LESA) is a deduction for income tax purposes when energy efficiency investments are made to properties. It is open to all landlords who pay income tax and who let residential property. Tax relief is for a maximum of £1,500 per property and landlords can claim the allowance when completing their tax return.

Funding for Social Housing

Regional Housing Boards and Single Regional Housing Pot

For 2008-2011 the Department of Communities and Local government (CLG) has allocated £10.4 billion for regional housing capital programmes covering new social housing and improvements to the existing housing stock. We recommend that you contact the Housing Secretariat at your Regional Assembly to discuss any potential funding sources for your area.

Funding for Renewable Energy


Feed -in -Tariffs

Individuals, local authorities, community groups and other organisations who install low carbon electricity generating technologies up to 5MW will be eligible to receive Feed-in-Tariffs. The introduction of Feed-in-Tariffs aims to incentivise the installation of small scale, low carbon electricity generating technologies. Each installation will qualify for a payment for each kW they produce and a further payment for each kW exported to the grid.

Funding for Community Projects


Community Sustainable Energy Programme

Available to not-for-profit community based organisations in England. Funding is available for the installation of energy efficiency measures and microgeneration technologies as well as feasibility studies. Not available to local authorities or housing associations, but good to be aware of.

Big Lottery Fund

Grants are available to organisations in the public and private sectors. This funding supports a range of measures and proposals are welcomed. Big lottery fund offers a large number of programmes - a search function on their website can help to identify the most relevant funding.

Funding for Local Authority own estate and other initiatives 


Salix Finance

Salix is an independent company funded by the Carbon Trust to work with the public sector to reduce carbon emissions by investing in energy efficiency measures. Salix provides both grant funding and expertise. A range of measures are eligible for funding and Salix typically provides grants of £250,000 and up to £500,000.

Regional Improvement and Efficiency Partnerships (RIEP's)

A share of a three-year funding package of £185 million from Communities and Local Government is available from the nine RIEPs which were created in April 2008. Depending on your RIEPs priorities funding is potentially available for projects relating to climate change.

Primary Care Trust

Health authorities are sometimes willing to invest in energy efficiency measures in the homes of the fuel poor. It is often more cost effective for health authorities to invest in reducing ill health rather than to spend money on treating the health problems.

Urban Energy

Urban Energy has earned a reputation as the south’s leading renewable energy specialist. This has been achieved by ensuring that from the initial point of client contact we offer 1st class customer service and care.
We only install products that lead the way within the renewable energy industry and that are renowned for their high quality and ecologically sound production. This reflects our own high standards and quality assurance.

We understand that introducing a renewable energy system to either your home or business is an investment that lasts for many years. With our in-house electrical and plumbing division it is our promise to you the customer that your satisfaction and peace of mind throughout this period is our number one priority.

For further information about Urban Energy products and services:
Call: 0800 232 1624

Renewable Heat Incentive - Local Authority Funding

Details of the new Renewable Heat Incentive Scheme have been published.

The incentive, which is the first of its kind in the world, will encourage the installation of renewable heat equipment such as solar thermal technologies, biomass boilers and heat pumps. It will be funded from general Government funding, not through the previously proposed RHI levy.

Phase 1

From July 2011, the Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) tariffs for non-domestic installations in the industrial, business and public sector were introduced. There will also be support of around £15 million for households through the RHI Premium Payment from July 2011. In return for the payments, participants will have to provide feedback on how the equipment performs in practice.

Phase 2

From October 2012, RHI tariffs for domestic properties will become available at the same time as the introduction of the Green Deal. Anyone in receipt of Renewable Heat Premium Payments will be eligible for the RHI, as will anybody who has installed an eligible technology since 15 July 2009.

The RHI Premium Payment

Up to 25,000 installations from July will be supported by a 'RHI Premium Payment' to help cover the purchase price. Eligibility criteria for the payments will include:
  • A fair spread of technologies across all regions of Great Britain.
  • A well insulated home based on its Energy Performance Certificate.
  • A focus on properties off the gas grid, where heating fuels such as heating oil are more expensive and have a higher carbon content.
  • Agreement from the householder to monitor the performance of installations.
A DECC press release on 10 March 2011 indicated likely levels of support for RHI premium payments:
 
Technology Likely level of support (per unit)
Solar thermal £300
Air source heat pumps £850
Biomass boilers £950
Ground source heat pumps £1250

Full details of the RHI Premium Payment were published in May 2011. Due to State Aid rules there may be limits to how the Premium Payment is applied to social landlords.

RHI tariffs - domestic

RHI payments will start for homes alongside the Green Deal in 2012 to allow for a more whole-house approach to heat production and energy saving. The Department for Energy and Climate Change will consult on the RHI tariffs later in the year.
Those who have taken up the RHI Premium Payment will be eligible for RHI tariffs, as will anyone else who has had eligible equipment installed since July 2009 (exceptions apply if a grant has been received which contributed to the direct costs of an installation).
In order to receive support, local authorities and housing associations will need to be the owner of the installation and retain the rights and liabilities of the equipment.

RHI tariffs - non-domestic

Biomass, ground source, water source, solar thermal and biomethane projects in the non-domestic sector that have been installed since July 2009 in Great Britain will be eligible for RHI payments from July 2011. The payments will be made quarterly over a 20 year period to the owner of the heat installation.
A non-domestic installation is a renewable heat unit in a building which is not used as a domestic premises. This includes office buildings, schools and district heating schemes (e.g. one boiler serving multiple homes).
The support that an installation receives will be fixed and adjusted annually with inflation. For more details, see the RHI tariffs for non-domestic installations.

Applying for support

Applications for support will need to be made to Ofgem once the scheme is launched and open for business.

Further information

For further information, see the Department for Energy and Climate Change website

Urban Energy

Urban Energy has earned a reputation as the south’s leading renewable energy specialist. This has been achieved by ensuring that from the initial point of client contact we offer 1st class customer service and care.
We only install products that lead the way within the renewable energy industry and that are renowned for their high quality and ecologically sound production. This reflects our own high standards and quality assurance.

We understand that introducing a renewable energy system to either your home or business is an investment that lasts for many years. With our in-house electrical and plumbing division it is our promise to you the customer that your satisfaction and peace of mind throughout this period is our number one priority.

For further information about Urban Energy products and services:
Call: 0800 232 1624

Home Energy Use - Useful Statistics

Home Energy Use

There are many things that we can do around our homes to save energy and reduce our carbon dioxide emissions. Take a look at how much energy and carbon dioxide we could save if we all made energy saving choices.

Insulation

With around 50% of the heat lost in the average home through the walls and loft, there is a massive opportunity for us to save a huge amount of money and reduce our carbon dioxide emissions significantly:
  • If everyone in the UK installed loft insulation up to 270mm thickness, the equivalent financial saving would pay the heating bills of over 950,000 families for a year.
  • If everyone in the UK that could, installed cavity wall insulation, we could cut carbon dioxide emissions by a huge 7 million tonnes. That's enough carbon dioxide to fill nearly 40 million double-decker buses or fill the new Wembley stadium 900 times!

Electrical appliances

In the UK we spend a massive £2 billion a year powering washing machines, tumble dryers and dishwashers and a further £2.2 billion a year on fridges and freezers. This produces a mammoth amount of carbon dioxide but there are solutions to reducing these emissions in the shape of Energy Saving Recommended products.
  • If everyone in the UK upgraded their old cold appliances to an Energy Saving Recommended product, energy wastage would be cut by over two thirds and enough carbon dioxide would be saved to fill 24 million double-decker buses. There would also be enough electricity saved to run the UK's streetlights for 6 years
Reduce carbon dioxide emissions by using Energy Saving Recommended products.

Don't leave appliances on standby

Did you know that over £900 million worth of energy is wasted by leaving appliances on standby, so do your bit and don't leave your TV or other appliances on standby, and switch off chargers at the wall if they are not being used.

Lighting

In the UK, we spend £2.4 billion lighting our homes, and with lighting accounting for 10 - 15 per cent of our electricity bills there are substantial savings to be made by using energy saving light bulbs:
  • If every household installed just one energy saving light bulb, the electricity saved in a year could power the Blackpool Illuminations for nearly 900 years and there would be enough carbon dioxide saved to fill the Royal Albert Hall 1,980 times!
Save on electricity bills by using energy efficient bulbs.

Urban Energy

Urban Energy has earned a reputation as the south’s leading renewable energy specialist. This has been achieved by ensuring that from the initial point of client contact we offer 1st class customer service and care.
We only install products that lead the way within the renewable energy industry and that are renowned for their high quality and ecologically sound production. This reflects our own high standards and quality assurance.

We understand that introducing a renewable energy system to either your home or business is an investment that lasts for many years. With our in-house electrical and plumbing division it is our promise to you the customer that your satisfaction and peace of mind throughout this period is our number one priority.

For further information about Urban Energy products and services:
Call: 0800 232 1624

Farmers to benefit from £100m fund in renewable energy

Farmers in the UK will now be able to access a new £100 million fund to support the costs of installing large-scale renewable energy systems.


Barclays, with the help of the National Farmers Union (NFU), will provide loans to fund new solar panels, wind turbines and hydro electricity on farmland.

According to figures compiled by the bank, 37 per cent of farmers plan to invest in renewable energy, many of whom will be installing renewables in the next year, with the hope to generate returns of around £25,000 a year through the feed-in tariff (FIT).

However, the move also comes at a time when the government reduces the payment level that farmers can get through FITs, so the loan could be an additional incentive and help to reach the UK's renewable energy targets.

"The opportunities for farmers to produce renewable energy thereby helping to decarbonise the economy and contribute to the UK's long-term energy security are there for all to see," commented Meurig Raymond, NFU deputy president.

"Given the significant up-front costs of renewables technologies, commercial lending is essential to unlocking these opportunities."

Reference: Energy Saving Trust

Urban Energy:

Urban Energy has earned a reputation as the south’s leading renewable energy specialist. This has been achieved by ensuring that from the initial point of client contact we offer 1st class customer service and care.
We only install products that lead the way within the renewable energy industry and that are renowned for their high quality and ecologically sound production. This reflects our own high standards and quality assurance.

We understand that introducing a renewable energy system to either your home or business is an investment that lasts for many years. With our in-house electrical and plumbing division it is our promise to you the customer that your satisfaction and peace of mind throughout this period is our number one priority.

For further information about Urban Energy products and services:
Call: 0800 232 1624

Friday 2 September 2011

Scaling the Spinnaker for SolarAid

 http://solar-aid.org/about/2011/08/scaling-the-spinnaker-for-sola.html

A small team of fundraisers from Urban Energy abseiled down the Spinnaker Tower in Portsmouth last week, raising over £500 for SolarAid. The group, all staff from the solar installer Urban Energy, braved dizzying heights and difficult cross winds so that rural communities in Sub-Saharan Africa can live with clean and affordable light.

The money is being raised as part of the Hot 100 Challenge for 100 people to raise £1,000 each by the end of the year. Donations will allow: schools to light their class rooms; families to breathe clean air, free of toxic fumes produced by kerosene; health clinics to stay open after dark and entrepreneurs to establish sustainable solar markets. What's more, winning fundraisers have the chance to visit our programmes in Africa and to learn for themselves just how their hard earned gifts are being spent.

Please take a look at Urban Energy's vertigo-inducing pics below. To donate please visit http://www.justgiving.com/UrbanEnergyHot100

Urban Energy

Urban Energy has earned a reputation as the south’s leading renewable energy specialist. This has been achieved by ensuring that from the initial point of client contact we offer 1st class customer service and care.
We only install products that lead the way within the renewable energy industry and that are renowned for their high quality and ecologically sound production. This reflects our own high standards and quality assurance.

We understand that introducing a renewable energy system to either your home or business is an investment that lasts for many years. With our in-house electrical and plumbing division it is our promise to you the customer that your satisfaction and peace of mind throughout this period is our number one priority.

For further information about Urban Energy products and services:
Call: 0800 232 1624