New research by Solar Energy developer Gryd Energy has shown that houses in the hands of the municipality are installed on their roofs on their roofs earlier than private homes.
In the United Kingdom, approximately 5.5% of all homes owned by or rented by councils now have installed solar PV on the roof, with 99,146 council homes, including Solar PV. This is compared to 5% of private houses in the UK with solar installations on the roof.
The decentralized countries of the VK have varied percentages of solar success in this arena, with 8.4% of all houses in the municipality in Wales, including PV installations in solar energy, 7.9% of the council houses in Scotland with a solar energy in northern country and 3.9%.
Various regions stand out, has particularly high installations, such as northwest wales and northeast wales. Both regions have more than one in five rates of municipal houses with Solar PV installations, respectively at 23.6% and 21%. The Scottish region of Aberdeen and Noordoost also has a remarkably high solar installation percentage, with 13.5% of the council homes, including solar energy on the roof.
In the meantime, the capital of the nation is considerably behind, with only 1.8% of the municipal homes, including a solar installation. This is despite London Boroughs’ boring efforts to roll out solar energy on their property. In December last year, the London Borough or Hackney unveiled a new sun schedule that could save the tenants of the council on their energy bills, with 28 blocks of flats over three estates that were equipped with a total of 4,000 solar panels from the beginning of this year. As part of the scheme, which according to Hackney Council claims the first of its kind, the tenants of the Council will be able to buy electricity by around 15% less than the average market rate of electricity in the area thanks to a MicroGrid solution developed by emerging energy.
Mohamed Gaafar, CEO and co-founder of GRYD Energy, called the rollout of solar energy on council houses ‘remarkable’ in the light of the immense financial pressure that many local authorities represent. However, he added: “The rates of solar deployment on the roof must increase dramatically throughout the public and private housing landscape if we have to achieve the goals of the government by 2030.”
Gaafaar also insisted on the government to act according to its promises to ‘deliver a revolution on the roof’ for solar energy, and added: “The government must now act on that ambition and have serious investments and policy support behind helping local authorities and homeowners to reduce the technology and the te the technology” “