IKD: Innovation, Knowledge and Development
Projects
Carbon Saving through Commercialisation of Domestic Micro-Generation Technologies
Investigators
Prof Robin Roy
Dr Sally Caird
Prof Stephen Potter
Consultants: Dr Derek Taylor, Karen Yarrow
Energy Saving Trust: Simon Green, Jennie Abelman, Rosalyn Dungate
Funding
A six month scoping project from March to September 2007 in collaboration with the Energy Saving Trust, funded via a £50,000 grant from the Higher Education Innovation Fund's 'Carbon Connections' programme administered by the University of East Anglia.
A £180k OU/EST follow-up project to conduct detailed technical and user evaluations of heat pumps and to transfer findings to industry was submitted to Carbon Connections in Oct 2007.
Aims
The purpose of this project is to get a consumer and user perspective on the adoption and non-adoption of low and zero carbon heat technologies. The study has conducted preliminary technical and user evaluations of solar water heating, heat pumps and biomass stoves and boilers.
The main outputs were:
- A review of performance monitoring studies of low and zero carbon (LZC) heat technologies which identified heat pumps as the technology most urgently requiring technical monitoring and user evaluation to establish their potential for reducing UK carbon emissions and to develop accreditation standards.
- online surveys via the EST and BBC/OU websites, with responses from UK householders considering, rejecting, adopting, and using solar thermal hot water systems, ground source heat pumps, wood boilers and biomass stoves. The respondents were 535 householders visiting the the EST website and 554 successful applicants for Low Carbon Building Programme government grants. This has provided the most comprehensive data so far available on the UK market for low and zero carbon heat technologies; the factors influencing household consideration, adoption and rejection; and users' feedback on the technologies, which can help develop product development, marketing and evidence-based government support strategies to help achieve widespread adoption.
See recent reports and publications in design.open.ac.uk/research/research_dig.
Project contact
Prof Robin Roy, r.roy@open.ac.uk