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UK Again Cuts Solar Feed-in Tariffs

Kelvin Ross, Deputy Editor, Power Engineering International
May 25, 2012  |  6 Comments

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The UK government yesterday unveiled an overhaul of its solar feed-in tariffs.

From 1 August, the tariff for a small domestic solar installation will be 16p per kilowatt hour, down from 21p, and will be set to decrease on a 3 month basis thereafter, with pauses if the market slows down. 

All tariffs will continue to be index-linked in line with the Retail Price Index and the export tariff will be increased from 3.2p to 4.5p. The government claims that the new tariffs should give a return on investment of over 6 percent for most installations.

Tariffs have already been cut once this year: in April they were slashed from 43p to the existing 21p. The government tried to implement this reduction last December but was taken to court by solar companies who objected because a consultation period on the cuts was still ongoing. The government lost the case.

Energy and Climate Change Minister Greg Barker said yesterday that he wanted to send “a very clear message that UK solar continues to be an attractive proposition for many consumers considering microgeneration technologies." He added: “Having placed the subsidy support for this technology on a long-term, sustainable footing, industry can plan for growth with confidence.”

Alan Aldridge, chairman of the Solar Trade Association said: “Despite the currently slow market, the industry can have some confidence that the new tariffs are tight but workable. Householders should be reassured the new tariffs will provide more attractive returns than can be found elsewhere today. The STA is now keen to work with government to get this positive message out.”

Image: BrAt82 via Shutterstock

6 Comments

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Leighton Facey
Leighton Facey
May 30, 2012
Don't forget to add in the 50% avoided electricity purchase, this significantly improves your ROI.
ANONYMOUS
May 29, 2012
Very few UK meters run backwards - a few of the old style spinning disc ones do . I was thinking of saying so, but as it's illegal, I didn't bother! I have a digital meter and it definitely doesn't run backwards even today when the sun is shining!
Jigar-Shah-Us - In the UK we have both - a renewables obligation, which over the years has been modified so much it is now almost a premium FiT and which is focused on large scale generation (>5MW)(but not exclusively) and more conventional feed-in tariffs as I described above for small scale generation and that is what the tariffs for PV above are describing.
Jigar Shah
Jigar Shah
May 29, 2012
The UK doesn't have a Feed-in-Tariff. It has a California style Performance Based Incentive. So the "FiT" rate offered is the bonus price above the electricity bill savings. The UK's program is far superior to a traditional FiT.
ANONYMOUS
May 29, 2012
UK meters DO run backwards so if you are producing more power than you are using then this is what happens. For the past week (nice and sunny) my meter has been doing precisely this! However, this is not supposed to happen and you are supposed to tell your utility provider. They are supposed to fit a meter that records incomming and outgoing power seperately. I have reported this but either due to cost (really how big a "loss" is it to the utility compared to the expense of fitting a new meter) or incompetance this has not happened, yet.
ANONYMOUS
May 29, 2012
maurymarkowitz: it's a FIT with an allowance for exported power! You are paid the FIT rate (43/21 soon 16p/kWh) on the total generation from the system. You are paid the export tariff (3.2p/kWh rising to 4.5p/kWh) on the amount you export. For most domestic applications the export is deemed at 50% of the total generation. Net metering is not permitted in the UK - our meters will not run backwards! You can choose to have an export meter installed if you wish, but the cost doesn't really stack up with the 50% deeming
Maury Markowitz
Maury Markowitz
May 27, 2012
How does the tarrif work? It is strictly a FIT, or is there a net metering component as well?

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Kelvin Ross

Kelvin Ross

Kelvin Ross is Deputy Editor of Power Engineering International magazine and its associated publications – Middle East Energy and the Global Power Review. Previously, Kelvin was News Editor at UK online news site Energy Live News, Production...
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