by Gijsbert van Dalen
This week the UK government announced new legislature which will be devastating for the solar panel industry in Canterbury. People will get fewer subsidies and it will also be much harder for people get government money for their solar energy.
These changes will come into force at the 12th of December. Solar companies in Canterbury are working full time at the moment to finish as many jobs as possible before this date.
The tariff of solar power that the government pays to householders will fall from 43.3p per KWh to 21p. Besides that, houses need an energy rating of C in order to make use of the subsidies.
Geoff Meaden of the Kent Green Party doesn’t think this is a good development: “Many houses do not have proper insulation, so they won’t get any solar panels anyway.”
Howard Johns of the Cut Don’t Kill campaign told the Guardian that he agrees on cuts, but that the 50% of the current plan is too much. He thinks 4,000 companies and 25,000 jobs are in danger because of this new rules.
“If a lot of people can’t buy solar panels, of course it will reduce the sales of solar panels. And that will put an awful amount of people out of work,” says Meaden.
According to the Department of Energy and Climate Change (Decc), 9 out of 10 households don’t have this energy rating, and have to invest 5,000 pounds before they can use the subsidies.