Consultation on a review of the Feed-in Tariff scheme
A review of the Feed-in Tariff Scheme, the Government’s subsidy scheme for generation of renewable electricity from small-scale installations.
The FITs Review team will be available to answer questions about the consultation live by webchat between 12:00 – 13:00 on Friday 16 October 2015. There is no need to register, please just enter the webchat on Friday and post your questions for the team and they will do their best to answer in real-time. We are hosting this webchat to supplement the face-to-face workshops we have held with hundreds of participants in Cardiff, Bristol, London, and Edinburgh over October.
Update – 9 October 2015The consultation document was updated to make a correction to consultation question 16 concerning the extension of installations and the summary table on p10. This correction clarified that the proposal was to prevent extensions to all installations claiming the Feed-in Tariff whether existing or future installations.
Update – 4 September 2015The Impact Assessment and consultation document were updated on 4 September 2015. Table 23 in the Impact Assessment and Figure 5 in the consultation document both show the estimated number of installations under deployment caps. These have been corrected for Anaerobic Digestion and Hydro installations, after an error was identified in the analysis.
The Feed-in Tariff Scheme is the Government’s subsidy scheme for generation of renewable electricity from small-scale installations.
The UK is obliged by our EU State Aid notification to consult on the performance of the Feed-in Tariff Scheme every three years. As the last FIT Review took place in 2011/12, 2015 is the time to reconsult on aspects of FIT’s performance.
Furthermore, due to projections of overspend on the Feed-in Tariff scheme and consequential pressure on the Levy Control Framework, as well as very successful deployment of renewable technologies, we are also consulting on a range of cost-control measures.
As requested at stakeholder events, questionnaires from the Parsons Brinckerhoff Report are now also available in excel format rather than pdf format should respondents wish to use them as a template to submit evidence on costs of deployment.
DECC commissioned Parsons Brinckerhoff in March 2015 to conduct an update of small-scale renewable generation costs. This update relates to the five generation technologies eligible for the Feed-in Tariff (FIT): wind, solar photovoltaic (PV), hydro, anaerobic digestion (AD) and micro combined heat and power (CHP).