
Hundreds of schools and hospitals across the UK are expected to receive £180 million for the solar panel from the new government energy company.
Greet Energy’s first major investment was announced on Friday as part of the government’s efforts to reduce the country’s heating gas.
The move was welcomed by the Union of School Leaders and NHS suppliers union that they said it would help manage the “great financial pressure” of energy bills.
But the shadow energy secretary Andrew Bowi said the government’s pure government’s pure plans would make the country “povert”.
“At the moment, the money you need to be spent on your children’s education or your family’s health care is wasted instead of high air energy money,” Energy Minister Id Miliband said Friday.
“The first major British Energy project to help our important public institutions must save hundreds of millions of chapters to invest in the front line,” he said.
The government also hopes to provide the project to provide solar panels to 200 schools and 200 hospitals, reduces the use of stone fuel throughout public property and helps achieve long-term climate goals.
This is not the first time there has been such a project – the Public Sector’s Declaration Plan, which has begun under the former conservative government, has been going on for more than four years, with nearly three billion pounds distributed to green technology.
In the first phase, the project will target less than 1% of schools.
But Alex Green, head of the zero – a national campaign to ease the effects of school climate – said this was the first step welcomed.
“It’s difficult for economic times, and seeing this progress is a big step. (while) admits that 200 schools are a small starting point, to achieve this within a year is a good path,” he said.
The announcement was strongly welcomed by schools, trade unions and NHS officials that have previously warned of high energy pressure.
In 2022, the National Association of Teachers (NAHT) announced that one-third of its leaders predicted a budget deficit after rising energy costs.
NAHT Secretary-General Paul Whiteman said schools wanted to put a solar panel because they had cheaper energy than gas, but in advance could be banned.
“Therefore, this announcement is welcomed and one step is in the right direction. In the long run, this must help schools in the management of the energy bill, which has been the source of major financial pressure in recent years,” he said.
But the acting minister was not in favor of the government’s way to save money.
“So still, the zeroser of the labor network at work to make us worse. The government is still jeopardizing our energy security with its attacks on North Sea oil and gas – the handover of energy independence to foreign powers such as Russia,” he said.
But energy experts have said investment in renewed energy can reduce this dependence on imports.
“This is a GB of energy investment in energy security because the solar panels will reduce the amount of gas we need to import from people like Putin,” said Jess Ralston, an energy analyst in the intelligence intelligence unit.
The first panel is expected to be set by the end of the summer and the government has announced that it will intensify them in the “highest necessity” areas.