Construction News

Mon May 20 2024

Related Information

Hydrogen heating trials shelved

10 May The government has decided not to progress work on a hydrogen town pilot until after 2026.

Heat pump manufacturer Kensa says that hydrogen conversations just get in the way
Heat pump manufacturer Kensa says that hydrogen conversations just get in the way

The government has withdrawn its offer of grant funding to gas distribution companies to set up a pilot ‘hydrogen town’ heating project by 2030.

This follows consideration of the future of the work in light of the decision in December 2023 not to proceed with the hydrogen village trial in Redcar.

In an update yesterday, the government said: “We believe that low carbon hydrogen may have a role to play in heat decarbonisation, alongside heat pumps and heat networks, but in slower time in some locations. We plan to take a decision in 2026 on whether, and if so how, hydrogen will contribute to heating decarbonisation.

“We will assess evidence from our wider research programme, the neighbourhood trial in Fife and similar schemes across Europe, to take this decision.”

Related Information

With heating in buildings accounting for more than 20% of national carbon emissions, the government is keen to promote low carbon alternatives to oil and gas but uncertainty surrounding hydrogen is pushing it towards heat pumps as its preferred long-term solution.

James Standley, chief technology officer of heat pump manufacturer Kensa Group, said: “Halting the development of a hydrogen village is further recognition that the technology has no major role to play in future home heating. Every academic study on the issue, the economics and the physics demonstrates this, and the government should now take the next logical step and rule out hydrogen heating for anything other than a small number of very specific cases.

“It’s clear that the best and quickest way to achieve clean heat while ensuring the best outcomes for consumers will be through electrification, whether that’s using heat pumps or heat networks. The longer hydrogen remains part of the conversation, the further the transition will be delayed, hampering the speed at which these already proven technologies are rolled out.”

Got a story? Email news@theconstructionindex.co.uk

MPU
MPU

Click here to view latest construction news »