The 'shambolic' low carbon building programme is suspended by the DTI as renewable firms call for further increase in investment

Renewables experts have expressed fears that the last week鈥檚 suspension of small scale renewable grants will hurt small renewable manufacturers.

好色先生TV of the suspension of the Low Carbon 好色先生TV Programme slipped out at the same time as Gordon Brown committed a further 拢6 million to the scheme in last week鈥檚 Budget.

A spokesman for solar panel firm Solarcentury said the suspension would hit small firms the hardest. He added that Shadow Trade Secretary Peter Ainsworth was justified in describing the situation as 鈥渟hambolic鈥.

Commenting on the grants programme, DTI head Alistair Darling admitted that 鈥渢here have been problems in meeting the unprecedented demand.鈥 April鈥檚 allocation of grants has been suspended to coincide with the restructuring of the scheme.

The Solarcentury spokesperson said that the extra 拢6 million was a small increase in a 鈥渓ong-running drip feed.鈥 Drawing comparisons with equivalent schemes in Germany and Japan, he said that UK funding was 鈥渋nfinitesimal鈥 and that the programme was 鈥渓imping along and in disarray.鈥

Dave Sowden, chief executive of the Micropower Council, said: 鈥淭he financial support available to energy efficiency programmes and large-scale renewables now run into billions of pounds. By contrast, the micropower industry still only has 拢18 million of support over a three-year period.鈥

Sowden welcomed the extra money and other Budget policies as a 鈥渟tep in the right direction鈥 but said: 鈥渢he administrative arrangements for the grants scheme, in particular the monthly capping, is now unquestionably acting as a brake on the industry, rather than as an accelerator.鈥

DTI Ministers will meet with industry figures to discuss how best to operate the new scheme and will announce the way forward in May.