While Greg Barker, Minister at the department of Energy and Climate Change, struggles to get the Renewable Heat Incentive up and running in a logical and coherent form and struggles to respond to an enquiry from my Member of Parliament Mike Freer about the lack of certainty in the RHI, the Scots seem to be getting on with decarbonising heat and delivering a cleaner more emission from Scotland that puts DECC to shame. In particular the City of Aberdeen has managed, without much fuss and a great deal less angst and much more common sense than that has been displayed by the chaps at DECC. (more…)
Filed under: banking, carbon emissions, climate change, electricity, energy, fuel, gas, genersys, global warming, heat, microgeneration, PV, renewables, solar, solar energy, solar panels, wind turbines | Tagged: A Concise Guide to Energy in the United Kingdom, Bon Accord, City of Aberdeen, Council Tax reductions, DECC, derivatives, financial instruments, greg barker, mike freer, RHI | 1 Comment »