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Heat Pump Owners Host Tupperware Party-style Visitor Days
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Heat pump owners across the UK are hosting visitor days in their homes in the latest effort to convince sceptical families to make the switch from traditional gas boilers.<br><br>The new 'Visit A Heat Pump' scheme will allow people to see the technology in a property near them, amid concerns uptake is at less than half the [https://www.newsweek.com/search/site/expected%20levels expected levels].<br><br>Efforts to get people to install the pumps are claimed to have been held back by low awareness and costs remaining high - four times more than a gas boiler. Uncertainty over a role hydrogen could play in homes is also said to have hampered investment.<br><br>Now, British innovation charity Nesta has teamed up with heat pump owners to launch the VisitAHeatPump.com website, to enable householders considering installing the technology to visit a [https://www.paramuspost.com/search.php?query=property&type=all&mode=search&results=25 property] where one is already in and working.<br><br>But Pimlico Plumbers founder Charlie Mullins called the idea 'dodgy and desperate', adding: 'Who would volunteer to have strangers tramping through their house?!'Β <br><br>Nesta said the move from polluting gas boilers to low-carbon heating such as heat pumps will be essential for the UK to meet its climate-tackling goals. The pumps are a key element of the Government's bid to make homes greener and [https://nhanlambangcap24h.com/ https://nhanlambangcap24h.com/] hit Net Zero.<br><br>But uptake has been far lower than hoped, with just 55,000 installed in 2022 against a Government target of 600,000 to be fitted a year by 2028 - and 1.6million by 2035.<br><br>The new idea has been compared to 1950s Tupperware parties when supporters of the container brand would invite people into their homes to show off the products.<br><br>And psychologists described the scheme as a 'textbook example of how behavioural economics can be applied to encourage environmentally friendly choices'.<br><br><br><br><br>Among those signing up to the host viewings is John Condon who added a heat pump to his Victorian two-bedroom home in a conservation area in East London in September 2022<br><br><br><br><br><br>Three of the homes on the VisitAHeatPump.com website which are offering public viewings<br><br><br><br><br><br>A publicity picture for the new VisitAHeatPump.com website where people can book viewings<br><br><br><br><br><br>1950s -- A woman holds containers while standing in front of a group of women in a living room during a Tupperware party. Some of the women are wearing hats made from the containers<br><br>Nesta claimed most people in the UK have never even seen a heat pump. It hopes giving more people the chance to see a heat pump in a real-world setting, and ask an existing user about it, will give them confidence that it is the right fit for their home.
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