Our expert advice will help you plan and build it with more confidence.
Search the map provided by the Association for Decentralised Energy (ADE) or check out The Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy’s survey of existing schemes.
If your area is listed, you will be able to save money and carbon on your scheme.
Large new schemes in your council might need to meet:
The government’s Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) pays generators so they can overcome the higher costs of boilers and fuel. Producers of solar PV can also benefit from government funding.
There is a wealth of information online about the RHI - not least from suppliers of wood fuel and the boilermakers that consume it. So make sure someone is researching it.
Community Heating, especially the building networks is not as common in the UK as it is on the Continent and in Scandinavia, so you need to take care to select a design consultant who has sufficient experience and understands your needs.
Tailoring heat requirements in community heating is a precise science, and you might have to find a specialist consultant to find an engineer with hands-on experience.
The best-planned community heating scheme is in peril when contractors try to save money on construction schemes. Builders are under a lot of pressure from clients to value engineer schemes.
To prevent this, clients should exclude community heating from having costs stripped out during the design and build process.
One solution is to put in place a frame work for community heating specification across all your developments.
Collecting data, web-based billing, commissioning automatic meters….
The responsibilities of the Heat Supplier are many and varied. And every link in the
chain has to be kink-free and well-oiled.
Getting something wrong means incorrect bills, unhappy customers and missed payments. A PAYG system is the obvious answer to these problems.
A one-stop shop should be considered because it puts responsibility for customer satisfaction in one place and will allow issues to be resolved quickly.
Homeowners and tenants must have absolutely no surprises about the costs they will be paying for their heat utility.
Potentially high standing charges and a locked-in system mean landlords and scheme operators need to communicate openly with their potential renters and buyers.
Make sure lease or sale terms and conditions include heat sale agreements which cover these charges.
A duty under the Heat Network Regulations 2014 is that all schemes must be reported to the The Department for Business Energy & Industrial Strategy on behalf of the Government. This template allows you to do this.
Heat suppliers should also report key information annually, including price data. This is a matter of public benefit and supports the growth of the industry – helping everyone.
The development contract must include specifications which show your scheme is efficient. These should be protected by a framework agreement.
Efficiency and cost to the residents is becoming a hot topic and should be addressed in your specification. You need to make sure your consultant engineers put measures in place so the system’s efficiency can be monitored and maintained on an ongoing basis.
As well as the requirement to register your new heat network with the Government, (see slide 8), consider registering with the Heat Trust.
The new organisation calls itself a “ voluntary, industry led, self-regulation initiative that recognises best practice.” It requires heat providers to provide standardisation and best-practice in all areas of heat provision.
The aim is to make it “comparable to the quality and performance standards for regulated utilities.”The more schemes joining, the less chance of regulation.
Scheme operators are required to provide billing to residents by law. But bills can still be confusing and lack clarity.
Make sure that consumers understand what they are paying for, as well as how the cost of their heat compares with having a boiler.