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Posts Tagged ‘Builders Merchants’

Builders, Bacon Butties and Bitterly Cold Weather!

Monday, March 1st, 2010

 FREE BACON BUTTIES FOR NEW USERS!!!

The first BuilderScrap Road Show has now started!  Over the month of March, we will be visiting Builders Merchants in the North West region to promote the benefits of reuse to new and existing BuilderScrap members.

The road shows are being run in partnership with Huws Gray, the successful Wales and North West Builders Merchants.

The first event was held this morning at Huws Gray Ellesmere Port, and we are pleased to have signed up many new members.

Anyone interested in lowering their costs and doing their bit for the environment, is invited to join us at any of the below events for a free bacon sandwich*, a cup of tea and a chat!  Just call in any time between 8am and 12 noon.

Friday 5th March 2010 Huws Gray Heswall

Monday 8th March 2010 Huws Gray Aintree

Wednesday 10th March 2010 Huws Gray Burscough

Friday 12th March 2010 Huws Gray Moreton

Monday 15th March 2010 Huws Gray Wallasey

Wednesday 17th March 2010 Huws Gray Heswall

Friday 19th March 2010 Huws Gray Ellesmere Port

Monday 29th March 2010 Huws Gray Aintree

Wednesday 31st March 2010 Huws Gray Flint

Thursday 1st April 2010 Huws Gray Wrexham

For details of any locations, please visit www.huwsgray.co.uk or call us on 0844 2253000

Here are some pictures from our first (rather chilly) day:

The BuilderScrap Team ready to sign up new users

The BuilderScrap Team ready to sign up new users

BuilderScrap's Dannii sampling the free bacon sandwiches!

BuilderScrap's Dannii sampling the free bacon sandwiches!

 * terms apply

See you at the next event!

Solar panel costs ‘set to fall’

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

Roger Harrabin the Environment analyst for the BBC News suggests;

The cost of installing and owning solar panels will fall even faster than expected according to new research.

Tests show that 90% of existing solar panels last for 30 years, instead of the predicted 20 years. According to the independent EU Energy Institute, this brings down the lifetime cost.

The institute says the panels are such a good long-term investment that banks should offer mortgages on them like they do on homes.

At a conference, the institute forecast that solar panels would be cost-competitive with energy from the grid for half the homes in Europe by 2020 – without a subsidy.

Basically everything (in the industry) is bound to grow still further. Growing further means less cost Heinz Ossenbrink, EU Energy Institute

Incentive programmes for solar panels in Germany, Italy and Spain have created manufacturing volume that’s bringing down costs. Solar panel prices dropped 30% last year alone due to an increase in output and a drop in orders because of the recession.

Solar Panels 1

But Heinz Ossenbrink, who works at the institute, said China had underpinned its solar industry with a big solar domestic programme which would keep prices falling. There are large-scale solar plans in the US and India too.

Panels had been expected to last for 20 years and price calculations were based on this (with a free energy source, purchase and installation represent almost the entire price of solar power).

But Dr Ossenbrink says the institute’s laboratory has been subjecting the cells to the sort of accelerated ageing through extremes of heat, cold and humidity that has long been a benchmark for the car industry.

Long lifetime

It has shown that more than 90% of the panels on the market 10 years ago are capable of still performing well after 30 years of life, albeit with a slight drop in performance.

Dr Ossenbrink says 40-year panels will be on the market soon.

A key goal for solar is what is known as grid parity. That is the point when it is as cheap for someone to generate power on their homes as it is to buy it from the grid.

It varies from country to country depending on electricity prices, but the institute estimates that Italy – which has a combination of sunny weather and relatively high electricity prices – should reach grid parity next year. Half of Europe should be enjoying grid parity by 2020, it estimates.

Cloudy northern countries like the UK could wait further, possibly up to 2030. But the day would come when solar panels on homes would be cost-competitive without a subsidy, even in Britain.

Dr Ossenbrink says: “Basically everything (in the industry) is bound to grow still further. Growing further means less cost. Less cost means grid parity.”

“We have been surprised in the past five years at the drop in prices. It’s due to good incentive programmes first in Germany then Spain and Italy. That created a kind of a boom that was helping industry to reduce costs and get into profitability. And when an industry is in profit it drives on its own.”

Owning solar

Professor Wim Sinke, from Utrecht University in the Netherlands, who leads the solar umbrella group the European Photovoltaic Technology Platform, says the industry has even greater ambitions.

“The target of the sector as a whole is to reach grid parity in almost all of Europe over the next 10 years. So by 2020 we should have grid parity in most of Europe,” he told BBC News.

Key sticking points for domestic solar, he said, would be the lack of flexibility in electricity grids to take in surplus generated energy and difficulties with finance.

Dr Ossenbrink said: “What I would like to see is the finance sector saying solar power is a product like financing a house – except they can predict the value of the solar panel much more safely than they can predict the value of the house in a volatile market.

“Electricity will never be given away free. Banks should offer mortgages on people’s solar panels like they do on homes – the bank should own the panel, then it would transfer to the householder when the loan has been paid off. It would be perfect for life assurances.”

It will take much longer for solar to match fossil fuel power at the point of generation, the institute says, as wholesale electricity prices are much lower than retail prices.

Hopefully one day we might see second hand solar panels on BuilderScrap.com or Builders merchants

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