Read the latest magazine Industry News Solar Coalition of UK Industries Calls for Renewables Tax Reform 30 October 2020 A COALITION OF trade associations representing major British industries including retail, property, construction and technology, has written to the Chancellor to ask that renewable energy technologies such as solar PV and battery storage be excepted from business rates to boost commercial deployment and provide much needed green jobs. The letter’s signatories include the National Federation of Roofing Contractors (NFRC) and Construction Products Association (CPA). Solar jobs The STA estimates that excepting solar PV from rates could deliver 1500-1800 additional jobs annually, and increase business investment in the UK by more than £315m a year. Many businesses shelved plans to install solar on their sites after a change in the way business rates are calculated saw early-adopters punished by skyrocketing premiums; in some cases, well over 500% more. STA Chief Executive Chris Hewett said: “This will help businesses in Britain to build back better and contribute towards a green economic recovery by easing the frankly unjustified and disproportionate tax burden on renewables, driving the uptake of new solar in the commercial sector and delivering thousands of high quality green jobs across the country.” National Federation of Roofing Contractors CEO James Talman said: “The roofing industry is in a prime position to help the government reach its net-zero target through the installation of solar technologies on Britain’s commercial roof spaces. However, we are being held back by the archaic business rates system, which is stifling investment and innovation. “We urge the Chancellor to rectify this by exempting renewable energy generation and storage from business rates to help reduce carbon emissions and create thousands of quality skilled construction jobs, as well as generating millions of pounds of green business investment.” The Government is currently undertaking a review of the Business Rates regime, with a public consultation due to close on Saturday 31 October 2020. The changes made in 2017 were met with contempt by several major businesses, including Sainsbury’s, IKEA and Kingfisher PLC. Exception from business rates for renewable energy technologies would bring tax treatment in line with certain fossil fuel technologies such as gas Combined Heat and Power. Previous article Roofers Very Busy but Many Face Wait to be Paid, says NFRCNext article SIG Roofing Acquires SM Roofing Supplies Share article You may also like View all News Industry News +2 20 March 2026 RA Issues Revised Safety Guidance on Rooflight Covers Awards and Events +3 20 March 2026 The Great British Slate Off Returns for 2026 Green Roofs +3 20 March 2026 Swansea Joins Global Network of Biophilic Cities Featured Solutions +3 19 March 2026 Flush Fitting Rooflights by Clement Sign Up to Roofing Today Stay up to date with all of the latest news from Roofing Today by signing up to our weekly Bulletins… Sign Up Today Get in Touch Check out the latest issue 123 March-April 2026 View Now Past Issues Get in Touch