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@BenjaminWatts BenjaminWatts commented Jan 12, 2026

Summary

Comprehensive expansion of Chapter 13 analysing the shift from Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) to Boiler Upgrade Scheme (BUS) for heat pump subsidies.

Key additions:

  • RHI tariff structure and the March 2022 rush before closure
  • Spark gap analysis showing how RHI made heat pumps profitable
  • Moral hazard discussion (NI Cash for Ash parallel, insulation disincentive)
  • Worked examples for typical semi-detached house
  • Fabric-first policy gap and lack of coordination with insulation subsidies
  • Skills gap and MCS certification limitations
  • BUS estimation risk shifted to homeowners
  • Grid capacity impact: 18 GW difference between COP 2.2 and 3.0
  • Capacity charging externality and landlord-tenant principal-agent problem
  • International comparisons:
    • Norway: Norgespris pricing, air-to-air dominance, NorthConnect rejection
    • Germany: Higher grants, income-tested
    • France: Fabric-first approach
    • Netherlands: Hybrid mandate from 2026
  • CHMM manufacturer obligations from 2025
  • Conclusion on subsidy design vs underlying economics

Word count: ~6,600 words (up from ~1,500)

Test plan

  • Review chapter flow and narrative coherence
  • Verify factual claims (RHI rates, dates, international policies)
  • Check cross-references to other chapters

🤖 Generated with Claude Code


Note

Substantial content expansion and restructuring of chapters/13-rhi-vs-bus.md, turning it into a comprehensive analysis of UK heat pump subsidy policy.

  • Explains schemes: Adds clear definitions of RHI vs BUS and the transition from ongoing tariffs to a flat upfront grant
  • RHI specifics: Tariff rates, heat demand caps, CPI indexation, and the March 2022 pre-closure installation spike
  • Economics: Spark gap walkthrough showing RHI profitability; worked examples illustrating moral hazard and anti-insulation incentives
  • Performance risk: Deemed payments under RHI vs homeowner risk under BUS; COP shortfalls and grid peak demand implications (e.g., 18 GW delta between COP 2.2 vs 3.0)
  • Externalities: Capacity-based charging discussion, landlord-tenant principal–agent issues, and installer incentive misalignment
  • Skills gap: Limits of MCS certification and workforce scaling challenges
  • BUS structure: Flat £7,500 grant, winners/losers by property type, and policy trade-offs
  • Hybrids: Case for hybrid systems vs current UK stance and implications for peak demand
  • International comparisons: Norway pricing regime and market isolation, Germany/France income-tested and fabric-first grants, Netherlands hybrid mandate
  • Future policy: BUS budget extension (2025–2028) and CHMM manufacturer sales obligations; outlook and lessons learned

Written by Cursor Bugbot for commit d9226ff. This will update automatically on new commits. Configure here.

- Add RHI/BUS definitions and fundamental policy shift explanation
- Document RHI tariff rates (10.85p ASHP, 21.16p GSHP) and heat demand limits
- Analyse March 2022 rush and CPI-indexed payments continuing to 2029
- Show RHI spark gap maths: how subsidies made heat pumps profitable
- Cover moral hazard (NI Cash for Ash parallel, insulation disincentive)
- Add worked example for 10,000 kWh semi-detached house
- Discuss fabric-first policy gap and lack of coordination with insulation
- Address skills gap and MCS certification limitations
- Analyse BUS estimation risk shifted to homeowners
- Quantify grid impact: 18 GW difference between COP 2.2 and 3.0
- Discuss capacity charging externality and landlord-tenant split incentive
- Compare international approaches: Norway (Norgespris, air-to-air, NorthConnect rejection), Germany, France, Netherlands (hybrid mandate)
- Cover CHMM manufacturer obligations from 2025
- Add conclusion on subsidy design vs underlying economics

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
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# Chapter 13: RHI vs BUS - Heating Policy Confusion

NOTE: What do RHI and BUS stand for?
The **Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI)** was a government scheme running from 2014 to 2022 that paid homeowners quarterly tariffs over seven years based on the renewable heat their systems produced. It was replaced by the **Boiler Upgrade Scheme (BUS)**, which from April 2022 instead offers a one-off upfront grant of £7,500 towards heat pump installation costs. This shift from ongoing payments to upfront capital fundamentally changed which households benefit most from heat pump subsidies.
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Unfinished placeholder content with TODO comment

Medium Severity

The text contains placeholder content x% to x% with an incomplete TODO comment (TODO: find dumers and source) where "dumers" appears to be a typo for "numbers". This unfinished content was likely not intended for the final document and creates an incomplete reader experience.

Fix in Cursor Fix in Web

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