Just 90,000 UK households will get vouchers to help shoulder the growing cost of removing their gas boilers as Ministers commit to banning the sale of conventional gas boilers from 2035.
Boris Johnson is pressing ahead with Net Zero plans to stop the installation of gas boilers in the next 15 years, with families encouraged to install low-carbon heating systems from April with £5,000 grants set to cost taxpayers in England and Wales at least £450million in total.
However, the funding will allow just 90,000 heat pump installations over three years – far short of the Prime Minister’s goal of 600,000 a year by 2028.Conservatives are already starting to ask whether the vouchers will prove impactful if just a fraction of the country can benefit, with concerns that people who had already planned to switch will mainly benefit from the scheme.
Tory former minister Steve Baker last night warned that the Government is likely to face a backlash when voters realise the costs involved of switching away from gas, adding: ‘It is not clear to me how a boiler ban is going to be affordable for the public. If you have any inquiries about in which and Kombi Servisi how to use Kombi Servisi, you can call us at our own internet site. ‘
The voucher scheme was one part of the Heat and Buildings Strategy due to be published on Tuesday, which will map out how the UK will move away from polluting energy sources in homes and public buildings.
It comes amid reports of rising tensions between the Prime Minister and Chancellor Rishi Sunak as the Treasury warned of ‘diminishing returns’ from green investment, at a time when the UK’s post-Covid economic recovery has slowed amid rising inflation and kombi Servisi widespread shortages.
The decision also came as Prince Charles warned about the consequences of climate change, and told how his grandson Prince George learning how global warming was causing ‘the big storms, and floods, the droughts, kombi servisi fires and food shortages’ around the world.
Boris Johnson is pressing ahead with plans to stop the installation of conventional gas boilers in the next 15 years, despite Conservative warnings that the move could spark fury among the public
The boiler plans are outlined in the Government’s long-awaited ‘heat and buildings strategy’, to be published today (file image)
It comes amid reports of rising tensions between the Prime Minister and Chancellor Rishi Sunak as the Treasury warned of ‘diminishing returns’ from green investment
Boris Johnson wants to push Britain towards new sources of energy for homes, including hydrogen, left, and ground source heat pumps, right