Heat pump roll out needs a rapid restart
Heat pump uptake is stalling. Euroconsumers members are part of the CLEAR-HP project which wants to make the heat pump choice an easy and affordable one.
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Europe needs a home heat transition, and if more consumers install heat pumps it could provide comfortable homes, protect consumers from bill shocks and bring us closer to energy independence.
What are heat pumps? Heat pumps have been championed as a versatile way of transforming the consumer heating experience. In tandem with good insulation, they can heat and cool homes using a lot less energy than traditional aircon units, boilers or electric heaters.
But getting from initial idea to installation can be a complicated and expensive journey. Switching whole home energy systems is a big step to take in an unfamiliar product market with few trusted information sources and multiple financing options.
Crucially, those who are keen to invest in a heat pump face a costly up-front outlay. At a time when persistently high living costs are leaving households with little spare money, this is out of reach for many.
The CLEAR-HP project was formed by nine European consumer organizations in 2023 to learn with consumers about what it takes to design a better heat pump purchasing experience, from information to price.
With cost topping the list of barriers to uptake, CLEAR-HP trialed a collective purchasing scheme so consumers can use their joint purchasing power to save money.
The CLEAR-HP partners, including Euroconsumers’ members OCU, Testachaats/ Testaankoop, Altroconsumo and DECO PROteste share what they have achieved and learnt.
Collective purchasing schemes bring together large groups of consumers, allowing intermediary organizations, such as national consumer organizations, to leverage this combined demand to negotiate more favourable prices and conditions with heat pump suppliers and installers.
CLEAR-HP’s campaign strategy moved beyond offering simple price discounts and focused instead on providing trustworthy, reliable support throughout the entire consumer journey. Here’s how the collective purchase scheme worked:
Co-funded by the European Union’s LIFE programme under the grant agreement No. 101119923. Views and opinions expressed
are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or CINEA.
Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.
Altogether, the combination of the workshops and the purchasing initiative gave me the confidence to move forward with the installation. In the end, I decided to install a hybrid heat pump system, and the entire process—from information to decision—felt well supported and worthwhile.
Italian participant in the heat pump collective purchase scheme
Information was also shared more widely through heat pump comparison webpages by OCU and Altroconsumo. …
Overall, over 23,000 consumers registered for the seven collective purchase campaigns and 522 installations were triggered.
That amounts to around €1,000,000 of investments in sustainable energy technologies, CO2 emissions reductions of 519.56 tons and 1.66 GWh/year primary energy savings – the equivalent of fully charging an electric vehicle (75 kWh) 22,000 times.
Results for consumers were positive too, follow up research with new heat pump users found they were highly satisfied, particularly with energy efficiency and comfort.
However, consumers who had signed up but not gone ahead with a purchase confirmed that up front costs were a significant barrier, and while government incentives have helped mitigate these costs in several countries they are not available everywhere and were withdrawn or changed at short notice.
But there are deeper challenges than just cost. Many people live in homes that are not ‘heat pump ready’ and cannot be easily adapted. The best suited accommodation for heat pumps are owner occupied newer builds with good installation. For people renting, living in multi-apartment buildings or older houses will find installation or performance challenging.
By drawing on direct experience of supporting consumers through the heat pump purchase journey, the CLEAR HP consumer organisations mapped out where different national policies, legal requirements like planning permission and funding or tax incentives were impacting on consumer appetite and ability to choose to install a heat pump.
For example, in Belgium both the operating and up-front costs of heat pumps have had tax reductions, and in Italy consumers are now able to recover up to 65% of eligible costs for clean heating upgrades in private residences.
In Spain, local tax incentives and simplified processes have made air-to-water heat pumps more accessible and affordable for residents, and Portugal has launched low-interest public loans to cover retrofit works such as window replacement, insulation, heat pumps and solar panels.
The wins CLEAR-HP achieved in just three years are very welcome, but a much more comprehensive national and EU wide approach is needed.
The collective purchasing scheme showed how important stable and predictable policy frameworks especially around financing are to unlocking consumer affordability, confidence and uptake.
Uptake improved when national schemes were clear and aligned with market initiatives, for example, combining VAT reductions or subsidy schemes with clear communication and timing of campaigns helped make heat pumps more affordable and easier to access.
Here is the policy roadmap created by CLEAR-HP partners to help develop a stable and predictable environment for heat pump consumers:
Heat pumps are one of the many potential green investments people are currently putting off. Even though longer term savings are predicted, the immediate up front costs feel too high for too many.
Running collective purchasing schemes like CLEAR-HP’s reduce some of the costs, and take away a lot of the technical and financial uncertainty for consumers.
But without consistent, long term fiscal and financial strategies to help consumers afford new green home energy, it’s unlikely that uptake will reach the tipping point required to reduce bills and energy use.
Co-funded by the European Union’s LIFE programme under the grant agreement No. 101119923. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or CINEA. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.