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Battle against the clock over green plan

Published date: 14 November 2011 |
Published by: Phil Robinson


 

CONTRACTORS are battling against the clock to complete a £28 million scheme to install energy-saving solar panels on the roofs of 3,000 Wrexham council homes.

Council chiefs who approved the major programme last year believed they could comfortably complete the installation by next spring to enable tenants to enjoy a reduction in their electricity bills.

But the plan hit a major obstacle earlier this month when the UK Government announced that the Feed-In Tariff (FIT), which pays people money for solar energy they generate and fed back to the National Grid, would be halved from 43p to 21p from December 12 and not next April as expected.

This has meant contractors on the Wrexham scheme have been ordered to pull out all the stops to complete as many installations as possible in the next four weeks.
Work started last week and the council says 250 installations should be done by the end of next week.

Cllr David Bithell, lead member for environment and transport said: “Wrexham Council's executive board on Tuesday of last week approved the continuation of its Solar PV installation project, despite Government proposals to cut FIT payments by 50 per cent.

“The council will work closely with its contractor over the next four weeks to maximise the number of installations that can be completed before the proposed FIT changes are introduced on December 12.

“The council also remains committed to completing all 3,000 installations by March 31, 2012.”

Tenants with panels fitted should benefit from cheaper electricity, saving £200-£300 – or 40 per cent – on their annual energy bills. The panels are being supplied by Sharp Electronics at Llay.

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  1. Posted by: a cahill at 11:28 on 14 November 2011 Report

    Green energy....a bit like buying a burial plot and being told to dig your own grave...energy companies making vast profits for shareholders...and forcing consumers to pay for any new ways of generating electricity by increasing bills

  2. Posted by: InMyOpinion at 12:38 on 14 November 2011 Report

    I like that:" tennents should benefit " a government report aired in parliament last week says solar panels are inefficient, and too expensive to be sustainable... there will be lots of new nighthoods going in the new year, and it looks like its solar panel kings getting credit for producing a sub standard, system which is flawed.

  3. Posted by: tomb62 at 13:34 on 14 November 2011 Report

    The real threat is to the consumer, some of who might be already risking their money by booking an installation from a company that knows they won’t be in business by 2012. It’s imperative that anyone considering a solar PV system should book their installation right away and buy from a strong, trustworthy company. http://www.solardirectsavings.co.uk

  4. Posted by: InMyOpinion at 13:49 on 14 November 2011 Report

    Consumers will not get any real benefits from a scheme that is not cost effective, power companies are making a killing on renewable energy, although solar power is more cost effective than wind turbines and is greener by the amount of carbons used in each unit.

 

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