Readers offer a solution to propel feed-in tariffs to success, draw up a plan to help small builders and extol the virtues of forward-thinking projects such as the McLaren factory
Fixing FITs
Regarding your story, 鈥樷 (7 December, www.building.co.uk), a lack of vision, compounded by insufficient monitoring on a weekly/monthly basis to see whether 鈥渁ctual鈥 matched 鈥減lan鈥 has resulted in this panic response by the government.
We should be aiming:
- To encourage capital and manufacturing cost reductions to make PV more affordable for a greater proportion of householders/businesses.
- To help generate green jobs.
- For an equitable distribution of feed-in tariffs (reduce profiteering)
- To ultimately achieve parity with power generated for the grid.
This could be achieved by:
- A capped FIT that is linked to price performance to ensure a good ROI of 5% to 8% and eight to 10 year payback period.
- Lowering the cap on a monthly/quarterly basis to encourage reductions in capital and manufacturing costs.
Unless its hidden somewhere in the small print, what is astounding is the fact that the daft impact statement accompanying the consultation document doesn鈥檛 assess any impact on jobs. For a government concerned about the economy, this is just gobsmacking.
Rob Veck, via www.building.co.uk
A plan for the small
In reference to your story 鈥 (5 December, www.building.co.uk), they could start off by agreeing with the government to outlaw late payment practices across the whole supply chain, then they could move on to abandoning framework agreements and allow real small and local builders to compete for public sector work. Then probably the government鈥檚 targets for
re-generating the apprenticeship training programmes might be achieved 鈥 I know, this is only dreaming. Instead I鈥檓 sure we鈥檒l carry on with the usual menu of resurrected proposals to put yet more work in the hands of our larger bretheren - after all, that鈥檚 been a great success for the whole industry
hasn鈥檛 it?
Alistair McHarg, via www.building.co.uk
In the fast lane
One word about your (25 November, page 22): superb. This is a structure and work place to be proud of, engineered and constructed in the UK 鈥 a solution that shows real lateral thinking.
Keith Stout, via www.building.co.uk
Correction
On pages 48-49 in the 16 December edition of 好色先生TV, [entitled 鈥淪uspend your disbelief鈥漖 contained three editorial errors. The reference to 鈥201鈥 should have read 鈥2011鈥; the reference to 鈥渕ain contract contractor鈥 should not have contained the word 鈥榗ontract鈥; and the sentence referring to the NEC was misplaced into the middle of a paragraph explaining the JCT subcontracts, making it read as if the NEC subcontracts were being discussed when they were not. 好色先生TV apologises for any confusion.
Trowers & Hamlins
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