Six months since the closure of the consultation on the future of the Renewable Heat Incentive, the Government is making its final decisions around how renewable heat technologies will be funded to 2021.

The Renewable Energy Association (REA), in association with the Wood Heat Association (WHA), has launched a new campaign that urges the government to prioritize the decarbonisation of heat and to support the continued use of sustainable, affordable, and low-carbon biomass.

One third of the UK’s carbon emissions are from the heat sector. So far just over 4 per cent of heat is being produced from renewable sources.

Biomass, derived from discarded tree limbs and other waste wood products, has been a popular means of decarbonising heat to date under the RHI, particularly for homeowners, schools, and businesses that do not have a connection to the UK’s gas grid.

To date, 56% of the renewable heat generated in homes under the RHI has been from biomass. It has also generated 81 per cent of the renewable heat used in for non-domestic properties.

A new video, produced by the Wood Heat Association, has been launched on social media. It outlines how the wood heat translates to emissions reduction when seen in context of the wider forestry industry.

The Wood Heat Association analyst Frank Aaskov said: “The biomass heat sector actively contributes to the regrowth of forests and has been the most popular technology under the Government’s Renewable Heat Incentive programme.

"The Government will be making major decisions about the programme’s future in the coming weeks and we’re urging them to remember biomass as a force for good.

“We are launching a campaign and a new video designed to emphasize that wood heat in the UK is an affordable and sustainable way to decarbonise our heat sector, particularly in rural or off-gas grid properties.”