New homes will be built with solar panels and heat pumps, the Government has announced, with plug-in solar also set to be available in shops “within months” for existing homeowners. This marks a renewed push for clean energy.
Ministers also unveiled plans for energy companies to offer discounted bills to residents living near wind farms on windy days. This would apply when operators are typically paid to turn off due to network constraints.
These initiatives are the latest in a series of government announcements doubling down on its clean energy drive. They come in response to the Iran war, which has sent fossil fuel prices soaring, raising the spectre of high prices at the pump and rising home energy bills later this year.

The Government said plug-in solar panels, which can be run into the home network using an ordinary plug and which are common in places such as Germany, where people hang them on balconies or fences, would soon be in the shops.
Officials said they were working with retailers such as Amazon and Lidl, alongside manufacturers including EcoFlow, to bring them to the UK market – so shoppers could soon see solar panels in the “middle of Lidl” aisle and other outlets.
The panels cut the amount of electricity being drawn from the grid, lowering bills and helping reduce the UK’s dependence on volatile fossil fuel markets for its electricity supplies, the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) said.
The move to speed up the delivery of plug-in solar is happening as new rules come into force to implement the “future homes standard”, building regulations that will make solar panels and clean heating standard in new homes.
Under the new standards, homes will be built with heat pumps or linked to heating networks, rather than gas boilers, and the majority of homes – with some exceptions – will be built with onsite renewable electricity generation, which is likely to be mostly solar.
The long-awaited implementation of the future homes standard comes a decade after measures to ensure homes were built to net-zero carbon standards were scrapped.
Officials said the measures on new homes could save up to £830 a year on each property’s energy bills, compared to a standard home with an energy performance certificate (EPC) rating of C, and create at least 75% less carbon emissions than those built to the 2013 standards.
And an approach, which will mostly benefit Scotland and the East of England, will be launched in time for this winter to offer discounted energy bills to customers on windy days.
Officials said historic underinvestment in the grid meant that wind farms in these areas have to be paid to switch off on windy days when the network cannot take all of the power they generate.
