1st one is Govt pushing heat pumps.
I think they see an opportunity for a growth industry and positive PR: Loads of UK companies making heat pumps and flying the national flag and even more companies installing them, all wrapped in a green agenda and with an opportunity to generate revenue through taxation. It comes across as a PR win. As I see it though, the idea is big on ideas and small on implementation strategy.
Point 2. Can someone please tell my why every new build house in the UK isn't built with solar PV panels on the roof, and/or why every industrial building on every industrial estate in the UK doesn't have solar PV installed on them?
Because the financial cost to install them dilutes the profit that the house builder would otherwise make. Buyers are not seduced by the advantages of PV, in part because the FIT incentives aren't there anymore and the pay back is still relatively long.
Industrial buildings, again, short term cost vs. long term gain. So many businesses don't look beyond the end of the current financial year.
If the cost of install for both 1 and 2 was properly subsidised so as to slot into a joined up green agenda then, maybe, the take up would be better. Few of us fork out the money to really promote a green agenda if it's going to cost us big time in the short term - even if we say we will.
BTW, we have PV on our house, just for context.