Yorkshire Post

1,000 jobs set to be created in solar panel scheme

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OVER 1,000 new jobs are to be created under a £1bn programme to install solar panels on social housing across England and Wales.

The Government welcomed £160m of capital spending by Dutch firm Maas Capital, which will help fund solar panels from UK company Solarplici­ty.

Around 100,000 households will receive panels in the next 18 months, reducing their energy bills by an average of £240 a year.

Around 800,000 households will be fitted with a panel over the next five years, with over 40 local authoritie­s and other landlords already signed up to the programme.

Many of the jobs to install and maintain the panels will go to veterans from the armed forces.

Internatio­nal Trade Minister Greg Hands visited a social housing developmen­t in Ealing, West London to see solar panels being fitted.

Mr Hands said: “After a record year for new foreign investment into the UK, this initial £160m capital expenditur­e program will deliver massive benefits to some of the UK’s poorest households.

“As well as creating 1,000 jobs and delivering cheaper energy bills for up to 800,000 homes, it shows yet another vote of confidence in the UK as a place to invest and do business.”

Tenants in the North West will be the biggest beneficiar­ies with over 290,000 homes receiving solar panels in towns like Oldham and Bradford, followed by the North East and Midlands, with 184,000 installati­ons and 154,000 on homes from Leeds to Derby.

David Elbourne, chief executive of Solarplici­ty, said: “Today’s announceme­nt is a reflection of our exciting growth in the energy market, backed by internatio­nal capital investment through the Department for Internatio­nal Trade.”

The news comes months after it was revealed a village in the heart of one of Britain’s former coalfields is to host a trial that could pave the way for tens of thousands more homes to run off solar power.

Tenants in 40 council homes in Oxspring, South Yorkshire, are being given batteries that can store electricit­y from rooftop solar panels.

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