Households will be able to apply for a £5,000 grant to swap their gas boiler for a low-carbon heat pump, as part of government plans to cut emissions.
The government announced that the £450m Boiler Upgrade Scheme, which is part of the more than £3.9bn funding to cut carbon from heating and buildings, will be used to help it reach its target for all new heating system installations to be low carbon by 2035.
However, the government insisted families will not be forced to remove their existing fossil fuel boilers.
Ministers said that switching to low carbon heating will cut emissions and reduce the UK's dependency on fossil fuels, as well as its exposure to global price spikes in gas. It will also support up to 240,000 jobs across the country by 2035, they added.
The scheme will encourage people to install low carbon heating systems such as heat pumps, which run on electricity and extract energy from the air or ground.
The £3.9bn funding will be used to cut carbon from heating and buildings, including by making social housing more energy efficient and cosier, as well as reducing emissions from public buildings, over the next three years.
The £5,000 grants will be available from April and will mean people installing a heat pump will pay a similar amount to those installing traditional gas boilers, according to the plans.
The grants for heat pumps will be available for households in England and Wales, as part of the UK-wide heat and buildings strategy.
Heat pumps currently cost an average £10,000 to install and do not necessarily deliver savings on running costs despite being much more efficient than gas, because green levies are higher on electricity than on gas.
The government said its plans would help people install low-carbon heating systems in a simple, fair and cheap way as they replace their old boilers over the next decade.
It said it would work with industry to make heat pumps the same cost to buy and run as fossil fuel units by 2030.
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Prime Minister Boris Johnson said: "As we clean up the way we heat our homes over the next decade, we are backing our brilliant innovators to make clean technology like heat pumps as cheap to buy and run as gas boilers - supporting thousands of green jobs.
"Our new grants will help homeowners make the switch sooner, without costing them extra, so that going green is the better choice when their boiler needs an upgrade."
Business and Energy Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng added: "Recent volatile global gas prices have highlighted the need to double down on our efforts to reduce Britain's reliance on fossil fuels and move away from gas boilers over the coming decade to protect consumers in long term.
"As the technology improves and costs plummet over the next decade, we expect low carbon heating systems will become the obvious, affordable choice for consumers."
Greg Jackson, chief executive and founder of Octopus Energy, said that when the grant scheme launches, his company will install heat pumps at about the same cost as gas boilers.
"Electric heat pumps are more efficient, safer and cleaner than gas boilers and can help make homes more comfortable with less energy," he said.
"Today we've crossed a massive milestone in our fight against climate change and to reduce Britain's reliance on expensive, dirty gas."
Labour's shadow business secretary, Ed Miliband, said: "As millions of families face an energy and cost of living crisis, this is a meagre, unambitious and wholly inadequate response.
"Families up and down the country desperately needed Labour's 10-year plan investing £6bn-a-year for home insulation and zero carbon heating to cut bills by £400 per-year, improve our energy security, create jobs and reduce carbon emissions.
"People can't warm their homes with yet more of Boris Johnson's hot air but that is all that is on offer."
Speaking to Kay Burley on Tuesday morning, International Trade Secretary Anne-Marie Trevelyan said the government's package is "far-reaching" and that the scheme will be "voluntary" in the "short term".
"In the short term of course this is a voluntary scheme," Ms Trevelyan told Sky News.
"But every 10-15 years we all get a new boiler so as part of the transition, this journey to net-zero, as we as domestic citizens make changes to our homes these support frameworks are there but also we will be driving those changes in regulation."
Pressed on criticism from the Green Party that £450m Boiler Upgrade Scheme will only provide 90,000 heat pumps when there are 29 million households in the UK, Ms Trevelyan added: "So, as I said, for a lot of the local authority homes there is already a huge scheme - billions of pounds - being used to help them to decarbonise, to insulate and indeed to change their heating systems.
"This £450m which is committed over the next three years will help those who really want to crack on, to give them effectively a cost-neutral opportunity to change the gas boiler they have now to a heat pump or some other clean energy solution as I have done with a hydrogen ready boiler so that we are moving towards that.
"So I think this is a great first part of the programme - but for those most in need, there is already a huge local authority scheme under way."
But head of the Climate Crisis Advisory Group Sir David King called for a "comprehensive strategy" on reducing emissions.
Referring to the £450m Boiler Upgrade Scheme as "a small step in the right direction", Sir David told Sky News that the "voluntary nature" of the policy "threatens its rollout".
Green MP Caroline Lucas agreed that the voluntary aspect of the scheme was concerning, telling Sky News "there simply isn't enough money in this package to properly insulate homes".
She added: "I am afraid this is yet another of Boris Johnson's big, flagship policies that when you start to look at the details, they are simply not there - and on the eve of the COP climate summit, this big Glasgow summit in a couple of weeks time, I think that is sending a very bad signal."
Meanwhile, shadow economic secretary to the Treasury Pat McFadden told Sky News: "The prime minister himself said we needed 600,000 heat pumps a year by 2028. This announcement funds 30,000 a year and it doesn't even fund them fully. So it is funding just one in 20 of what the prime minister said that we needed.
"And it just doesn't meet the challenge on home heating that we need to meet if we are going to meet our net zero targets and make the changes that we have to make."
https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMigQFodHRwczovL25ld3Muc2t5LmNvbS9zdG9yeS9ib2lsZXItdXBncmFkZS1zY2hlbWUtaG91c2Vob2xkcy13aWxsLWJlLWFibGUtdG8tYXBwbHktZm9yLTUtMDAwLWdyYW50LXRvLXJlcGxhY2UtZ2FzLWJvaWxlcnMtMTI0Mzc2NTfSAYUBaHR0cHM6Ly9uZXdzLnNreS5jb20vc3RvcnkvYW1wL2JvaWxlci11cGdyYWRlLXNjaGVtZS1ob3VzZWhvbGRzLXdpbGwtYmUtYWJsZS10by1hcHBseS1mb3ItNS0wMDAtZ3JhbnQtdG8tcmVwbGFjZS1nYXMtYm9pbGVycy0xMjQzNzY1Nw?oc=5
2021-10-18 21:01:31Z
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