Heat scheme hots up
6 January 2012 DECC
Umbrella company and holiday cottages are first two successful applicants to low carbon heating incentive
Umbrella supplier Booth Brothers in Sheffield entered the history books today by becoming one of the first places in the UK to get the government’s Renewable Heat Incentive.
Its offices, housed in an 18th century former corn mill in Penistone, will be kept warm through an underfloor heating system powered by a renewable energy heat pump.
The second installation to be accredited is at a set of holiday cottages in East Yorkshire. A ground source heat pump will provide heat and hot water to five holiday lets at Broadgate Farm Cottages in Beverley.
The £860m Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) was launched last year to make it more financially attractive for industry and businesses to install low carbon heating systems like heat pumps, biomass boilers or solar thermal panels.
View the full article on DECC's website.
Related articles
-
UK government to review Green Deal
-
Solar panel tariff appeal loss for government
-
Just 2% believe coalition is ‘greenest government’, survey suggests
-
Independent review on Fuel Poverty final report published
-
Environmental regulations set to be slashed
-
Green Deal Cash Boost
-
See DECC’s UK Energy Statistics – 2011 provisional data
-
Going for growth means going for green

