Will domestic consumers take up the renewable heat incentive? An analysis of the barriers to heat pump adoption using agent-based modelling
Authored by J R Snape, P J Boait, R M Rylatt
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.enpol.2015.05.008
Sponsors:
United Kingdom Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)
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Model Documentation:
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Abstract
The UK Government introduced the tariff-based domestic Renewable Heat
Incentive (RHI) in April 2014 to encourage installation of renewable
heat technologies as a key component of its carbon reduction policy. Of
these, heat pumps are considered to be the most promising for widespread
adoption and as such are the subject of this paper. Pilot studies prior
to introduction of the policy identified non-financial barriers to
uptake, such as the ``hassle factor{''} involved, and initial figures
indeed indicate that uptake is lower than expected. We analyse these
non-financial barriers using an agent-based model and conclude that
there is a tipping point beyond which adoption is likely to fall very
sharply. We suggest that the RHI's complex and stringent compliance
requirements for home inspections and heat emitter performance may well
have driven adoption past this point and that further intervention may
be required if the key aims of the RHI are to be achieved. (C) 2015
Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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