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  2. Feed-in tariffs in the United Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feed-in_tariffs_in_the...

    Suppliers are expected to pass on the cost to their electricity customers. [9] In 2010, the UK government estimated that feed-in tariffs to support small-scale low-carbon generation would cost £8.6 billion up to 2030 and produce monetised carbon savings worth £0.42 billion. [10] Feed-in-Tariff payments are tax-free in the UK. [11]

  3. Green electricity in the United Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_electricity_in_the...

    The scheme was launched in February 2010, with the UK's Big Six energy suppliers as members as well as Good Energy. Ecotricity elected not to join the scheme citing concerns about the additionality rules. [19] All suppliers offer domestic tariffs, but only some have offered small business tariffs under the scheme.

  4. 100Green - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/100Green

    Website. www .greenenergyuk .com. 100Green, operating as Green Energy (UK) Ltd, is a British independent-energy company based in Ware, [ 1] Hertfordshire. It was established in 2001 by CEO Douglas Stewart. [ 2] The company provides Ofgem -certified renewable electricity and green gas to domestic and business customers throughout Great Britain.

  5. Electricity billing in the UK - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electricity_billing_in_the_UK

    Electricity billing in the UK. In the United Kingdom, an electricity supplier is a retailer of electricity. For each supply point the supplier has to pay the various costs of transmission, distribution, meter operation, data collection, tax etc. The supplier then adds in energy costs and the supplier's own charge.

  6. Uswitch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uswitch

    uSwitch is accredited under the Ofgem Confidence Code, [10] a voluntary code of practice for online domestic price comparison services. uSwitch was involved in the formation of the Confidence Code in 2002 with Consumer Focus, which managed the code until Ofgem took over in 2013. uSwitch.com was previously accredited by Consumer Focus, and played a role in the industry consultation which led to ...

  7. Feed-in tariff - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feed-in_tariff

    The tariff for solar PV projects is fixed at ₹ 17.90 (US$0.397)/kWh. Tariff for solar thermal projects is fixed ₹ 15.40 (US$0.342/kWh). The tariff will be reviewed periodically by the CERC. In 2015, the feed-in tariff was about ₹ 7.50 (US$0.125)/kWh and is mostly applicable at the utility level.