With Heat Network Regulation due to come into force during Spring 2025 this webinar looks at implications for registered providers and local authorities with existing heat networks.
Topics Covered:
Heat Network Overview
- What they are
- Role now and in the future
- The promise and reality
Heat Network Regulation
- Current Regulations
- Consumer Protection
- Technical Standards
- Heat Zones
Responding to the challenges / action plan
- Key legal issues
- Planning and regulation
- Becoming a regulated Energy Supplier
Speakers:
Kris Kelliher, Partner, Real Estate & Projects
Kris has extensive experience of negotiating, drafting, reviewing and reporting on all forms of commercial contracts including maintenance and facilities management contracts, supply and distribution contracts, energy contracts, ICT contracts, catering contracts, joint venture agreements, outsourcing contracts care and support contracts and framework agreements and terms of business for various works, services and supplies.
Mark Foxcroft, Partner, Housing Management & Property Litigation
Mark’s practice encompasses all aspects of contentious property litigation on matters relating to both residential and commercial property. In particular, Mark specialises in leasehold matters and has extensive experience representing clients in the First Tier and Upper Tribunals. This work includes claims for forfeiture, service charge disputes, lease variations and extensions, statutory consultation and contentious boundary disputes.
Nicholas Doyle, Co-founder and Director, Chirpy Heat and Adecoe
Nicholas is a Director and Co-founder of Chirpy Heat. He has worked in housing for over thirty years and has been responsible for a wide range of award-winning housing, energy and environmental initiatives nationally and internationally that includes new developments, existing communities, corporate action and national research.
Will Routh, Director and Co-Founder, Chirpy Heat
Will has worked in social housing sustainability for 15 years and in 2019, he co-founded Chirpy Heat. He co-founded The Heat Network, a best practice sharing and lobbying group heat networks in social housing, co-creating The Heat Exchanger mentoring programme and he is currently an advisory group member for BEIS’ Heat Network Efficiency Scheme (HNES) programme.
This is a two part series – the next webinar is on 21 January 2025. Click here to register.
You will receive an email from Devonshires to confirm your place. Please note, places for this event are limited and may become oversubscribed. Clients of Devonshires will have priority and where we are heavily oversubscribed, we will limit places per organisation.