The Herald

Climate change will not stop unless we end gas heating

ANALYSIS Scotland must do more to end its reliance on fossil fuel in homes and offices and use rivers and air instead. Dave Pearson explains

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FOR the last decade, at Star Renewable Energy we have been talking about the urgent need for a renewable energy focus that includes heating, as well as electricit­y generation.

The environmen­tal impact of heating is double what electricit­y was and now with the progress made in onshore and offshore wind, heating should become “the” topic needing to be moved forward.

Considerin­g more than half of the energy we use in Scotland comes in the form of heat, wouldn’t it be timely if a renewable, affordable and efficient way of heating homes and commercial buildings capable of addressing both the clean heat and zero carbon challenges existed? In fact, it does.

Water, air and ground source heat pumps deliver nitrogen oxides (NOX), sulphur oxides (SOX) and carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions free heat.

When it comes to meeting carbon targets, heat pumps are a future-proof solution as their only input is electricit­y, and their carbon footprint is therefore tied to the electricit­y grid’s carbon content. As renewable electricit­y continues to be added to the grid, the carbon intensity of the grid declines and consequent­ly, heat pumps decarbonis­e and potentiall­y become zero carbon.

For heat pump technology to be extensivel­y deployed, the government must push down on gas combustion machinery and increase funding for heating technology as it becomes widely understood.

Sadly, we are making little progress and the progress that is being made is despite the inherent barriers that exist in policy. Even progress in new-build houses and buildings is slow. Planners are still allowing gas connection­s.

The question of why anyone want to buy or lease a house or office building with a gas boiler, that will be affecting local air quality and contributi­ng to the climate crisis for decades to come, can only be explained by the lack of political leadership to raise awareness of the environmen­tal impact.

We need to get across the message that “gas must go”. Media channels such as the 6 O’clock News and advertisem­ents next to new housing developmen­ts need to deliver the message effectivel­y.

However, the bigger problem is that there is zero shift in the acceptabil­ity of gas in existing buildings. These are not affected by planning applicatio­ns and therefore, there is a need for a different retrospect­ive lever to be applied.

Across the UK, there is a blind spot in policy interventi­on to encourage and shift users to a new paradigm. Decarbonis­ing heating and cooling in existing large buildings is possible by employing thermal networks or district heating fed by clean providers and specifical­ly big heat pumps – and not gas combustion engines.

But, there is barrier after barrier to the inward investment needed; why is it easier to get planning permission to deploy gas pipes over district heating?

Why would a clean heat station, like the one we are building for the largest water-source heat pump in Scotland at Queens Quay, Clydebank, have to pay non-domestic rates which are equal to a tax on clean heat of about 45 per cent when the equivalent charge on gas is tiny or non-existent?

Why are there no phase-down laws imposed on the continued use of gas burners in city centres when it is predicted that their NOX emissions will equal those from transport by 2025?

Why has VAT on clean heat solutions just gone up 400%? And why has the UK Government not made its 2018 commitment to announce the next steps to the Renewable Heat Incentive which is the only support mechanism to offset some of the costs to level the playing field with cheap, subsidised gas?

The solution has to be carrot and stick. Our vision is of a Fairopoly – a tri-partite agreement between cities, buildings and heat network developers.

If buildings can’t decarbonis­e at an effective rate – as much as 10% per annum is needed – they will agree to join district heating when it is available. With enough “pledges”, the cities can license developers to build the networks, allowing funds to be raised so creating employment and subsequent income and corporatio­n tax.

The developers will pledge that heat will be from clean sources at a fair and transparen­t price and so the solution gets built and buildings can switch effortless­ly to a cleaner solution.

And better still; these new energy stations will offer cooling to city users and might even directly import offshore wind, removing any concerns about grid stress but also helping to balance the grid by offloading the heating, which can be switched to stored hot water, freeing up the new power supply to help in cities.

The same cable could even be used for new EV charging hubs.

This is not dreamt up nonsense but is exactly what happened in Drammen in Norway. This allowed us to build our first district heat pump in 2010 that reduced the emissions and carbon footprint by 85% in one single step.

With world-leaders coming to Glasgow in November 2020 for COP26 I hope we can stand up and say we have decarbonis­ed huge parts of the city by harnessing heat from our river. It has to be the COP of “we got stuff done”.

This is not dreamt-up nonsense but is exactly what happened in Drammen in Norway

Dave Pearson is director of Star Renewable Energy and winner of the Champion of Renewables award at the Scottish Green Energy Awards

 ??  ?? A view from the Corbett Stob Dubh looking down on the head of Loch Etive as the lowering afternoon sun bathed the whole glen in gentle shafts of colour. Taken by reader Richard Anderson. We welcome submission­s for Picture of the Day. Email picoftheda­y@theherald.co.uk
A view from the Corbett Stob Dubh looking down on the head of Loch Etive as the lowering afternoon sun bathed the whole glen in gentle shafts of colour. Taken by reader Richard Anderson. We welcome submission­s for Picture of the Day. Email picoftheda­y@theherald.co.uk
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