The UK Government has unveiled a £5m heat training grant aimed at supporting 10,000 low-carbon heating installers for the next two years.
Heating engineers will be eligible for grants of up to £500 towards training costs, creating new green jobs, and helping to future-proof the heating industry, in a moved backed by the Heat Pump Association (HPA) which has been calling for more help to kickstart the heat pump installer situation.
The grants will cover most of the costs of a level three heat pump training course, for example.
Meanwhile, manufacturing members, including some of HPA’s members, are expected to offer additional discounts to participating trainees – further reducing costs for installers and providing a more affordable route to becoming a heat pump engineer.
The additional benefits could be worth up to a further £500 in product vouchers, additional training, and other support.
The HPA set out in its Pathway to Heat Pumps report that the first pillar of transforming Britain’s heating industry would be to create a highly skilled installer workforce.
The report recommended more intervention from the government to support adopters of low-carbon heating technology through compensation for training and loss of earnings whilst undertaking this.
The Association’s 2020 Building the Installer Base for Net Zero report called for the Government to introduce a voucher scheme.
The HPA has been working with the new Department for Energy Security and Net Zero to develop the scheme.
HPA chair Phil Hurley said: “Installers are the most important ambassadors of heat pumps to the consumer, and the HPA warmly welcomes this scheme to support them build on their existing skill base to become the green heating installers of the future.
“This is exactly the sort of early-bird support we have called for.
“We already have the building blocks in place – our own training course and capacity among our members to train 40,000 installers per year.
“This government scheme will give the industry a real boost in helping installers upskill for heat pumps to take over from gas boilers as the go-to heating technology for new and replacement systems alike in the majority of homes.”
Policymaking in relation to low-carbon heating is not currently sufficient to help the Government reach its legally binding climate targets, the Climate Change Committee (CCC) stated last year.
The CCC warned that there has been “no sustained” reduction in emissions from buildings in the last decade and that plans to change this are “not yet fully comprehensive or complete and significant delivery risks remain for many policy areas” that are listed in the Heat and Buildings Strategy.
The UK Government is targeting 600,000 heat pump installations a year by 2028 but the funding noted in the Strategy will not deliver this uplift in installations. Despite a 47% year-on-year increase recorded in annual installations in 2021, just 55,000 low-carbon heat pumps were installed.
In addition to providing public funding for heat pumps to unlock private funding, the CCC has called on the Government to better target funding at low-income homes and to ensure that the base of skilled heat pump installers and engineers grows.
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