Just received this from the STA:
"Many of you will have read the recent Sunday Times article in the Money section titled “Has the sun set on solar power?”. This is a very frustrating and biased article, riddled with errors, misstatements and in some cases, misrepresentation, in particular of the EST position. Please be assured that the STA has every intention of responding to this article to give us the opportunity to rectify the errors and present the facts. Meanwhile, Ian Cuthbert who is Microgeneration Manager at the EST has issued a response to the Sunday Times clarifying that he was misquoted. I have copied his response below.
In addition, the Renewable Energy Consumer Code (RECC formally REAL) also provided information to the Sunday Times, referencing their website. The article talks about the 30 complaints in 2009 (3 years ago) compared with the 1,130 in 2012, without referencing that installs increased significantly from approx. 12k to 201k in the same period. Teresa Hunter was directed to publicly available information on the RECC website, notably section 8 of the Annual Report Annual Report - Scheme - Renewable Energy Consumer Code (RECC) , and also the Summary of complaints Complaints Received - Monitoring - Renewable Energy Consumer Code (RECC) .
It was clearly pointed out to Teresa Hunter that the number of complaints per install has not changed, and remains around 0.5% of PV installs.
The STA will be responding to the Sunday Times article.
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Response from EST
Sunday Times article – “has the sun set on solar power?” by Teresa Hunter, 19 May 2013.
In response to your email in relation to the article above we would like to clarify a few points in relation to the role of the Energy Saving Trust in this article. Firstly, the tone of this article was set in the first few sentences in relation to complaints about solar PV and we understand the journalist approached us on the back of statistics received by RECC. We were asked by the journalist writing this piece a number of questions in relation to solar PV which we answered. However, the references made to the Energy Saving Trust were not a true reflection of what we said. Specifically,
·Solar panels being a “gamble” – we have been misquoted on this. We did not say solar PV is “more of a gamble”.
·Data used – this has been misrepresented. Our figures for solar PV costs are based on a 3.5-4kW system costing around £7k. See:Solar electricity PV (photovoltaic) panels explained - benefits, costs, savings, earnings, suitability
We have raised this with the Sunday Times.
We carry out interviews with print and online media on a regular basis and you can be assured that we will continue to be advocates for solar PV using the best available evidence available in terms of advice and data. However, when dealing with the media there are incidents from time-to-time such as this and we will always correct a journalist should we believe there are any inaccuracies.
We hope this clarifies for you our position on the matter.
Regards
Ian Cuthbert
EST"
So the slime balls in the Murdoch press are still at it. Just need the Daily Express to print some hysteria and that will make a nice set of three.
"Many of you will have read the recent Sunday Times article in the Money section titled “Has the sun set on solar power?”. This is a very frustrating and biased article, riddled with errors, misstatements and in some cases, misrepresentation, in particular of the EST position. Please be assured that the STA has every intention of responding to this article to give us the opportunity to rectify the errors and present the facts. Meanwhile, Ian Cuthbert who is Microgeneration Manager at the EST has issued a response to the Sunday Times clarifying that he was misquoted. I have copied his response below.
In addition, the Renewable Energy Consumer Code (RECC formally REAL) also provided information to the Sunday Times, referencing their website. The article talks about the 30 complaints in 2009 (3 years ago) compared with the 1,130 in 2012, without referencing that installs increased significantly from approx. 12k to 201k in the same period. Teresa Hunter was directed to publicly available information on the RECC website, notably section 8 of the Annual Report Annual Report - Scheme - Renewable Energy Consumer Code (RECC) , and also the Summary of complaints Complaints Received - Monitoring - Renewable Energy Consumer Code (RECC) .
It was clearly pointed out to Teresa Hunter that the number of complaints per install has not changed, and remains around 0.5% of PV installs.
The STA will be responding to the Sunday Times article.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response from EST
Sunday Times article – “has the sun set on solar power?” by Teresa Hunter, 19 May 2013.
In response to your email in relation to the article above we would like to clarify a few points in relation to the role of the Energy Saving Trust in this article. Firstly, the tone of this article was set in the first few sentences in relation to complaints about solar PV and we understand the journalist approached us on the back of statistics received by RECC. We were asked by the journalist writing this piece a number of questions in relation to solar PV which we answered. However, the references made to the Energy Saving Trust were not a true reflection of what we said. Specifically,
·Solar panels being a “gamble” – we have been misquoted on this. We did not say solar PV is “more of a gamble”.
·Data used – this has been misrepresented. Our figures for solar PV costs are based on a 3.5-4kW system costing around £7k. See:Solar electricity PV (photovoltaic) panels explained - benefits, costs, savings, earnings, suitability
We have raised this with the Sunday Times.
We carry out interviews with print and online media on a regular basis and you can be assured that we will continue to be advocates for solar PV using the best available evidence available in terms of advice and data. However, when dealing with the media there are incidents from time-to-time such as this and we will always correct a journalist should we believe there are any inaccuracies.
We hope this clarifies for you our position on the matter.
Regards
Ian Cuthbert
EST"
So the slime balls in the Murdoch press are still at it. Just need the Daily Express to print some hysteria and that will make a nice set of three.