Opinion
Managing the shift to electric heating
Ian Rose, sales and strategy director at Passiv UK, explains why he believes that electrification without optimisation is becoming the new bottleneck.
W
ith the Future Homes Standard now formally announced, the UK has taken a decisive step toward
electrified heating in all new homes. Heat pumps will become the norm, and this is a significant milestone in decarbonising housing – but are we optimising these systems to work intelligently within the wider energy network? The government is getting increasingly serious about building a connected energy system, one that works better for everyone. Recent initiatives, including the Energy Digitalisation Framework, and the Clean Power Action Plan, set a clear direction of travel, a more data-driven, interoperable and lower-carbon electricity system by 2030.
At the same time, the UK now has several important policies in place for homes: the Future Homes Standard for new builds, the Warm Homes policy for existing housing and emerging governance around Smart Secure and Interoperable Energy Smart Appliances (SSES). Taken together, these frameworks provide the foundations for a modern, flexible energy system. The question is no longer whether the policy exists, but whether it is aligned around the technology needed to make it work. The UK has spent the last decade focusing on fabric-first improvements – better insulation, better glazing, better walls. That approach made sense when reducing heat loss was the primary challenge, but the system has moved on. Electrification without optimisation is becoming the new bottleneck. As homes shift to electric heating and transport, the challenge is no longer just how much energy we use, but when and how we use it. We now need both approaches: fabric-first to reduce demand, and smart-first to manage it. At present, only one is consistently mandated.
Electricity demand is rising as households adopt electric vehicles, heat pumps and other low-carbon technologies. At the same time, more of our generation is coming from intermittent renewables such as wind and solar. This combination creates a new challenge: matching supply and demand in real time without overloading the grid. Without a more flexible
and intelligent system, we risk inefficiencies, higher system costs and potential strain on infrastructure during peak periods. Heat pumps are central to the UK’s decarbonisation pathway and, under the Future Homes Standard, will be required in new builds. But it stops short of mandating smart energy- management controls specifically for heat pump optimisation. Without optimisation, heat pumps behave as static electrical loads added to an already constrained grid. With smart controls, they become flexible assets capable of shifting demand in time without affecting comfort. One of the most promising ways to address this gap is through Demand Side Response (DSR) and wider demand flexibility services. These allow electricity use to be adjusted temporarily to help balance the grid, while unlocking savings for consumers. Demand flexibility is not new. Grid operators have used it for decades at an industrial scale. What is changing is the opportunity to extend it into homes at scale.
“Electrification without optimisation is becoming the new bottleneck. As homes shiſt to electric heating and transport, the challenge is no longer just how much energy we use, but when and how we use it.”
Ofgem estimates that up to 60GW of flexibility from low-carbon technologies will be required by 2050. Achieving this will depend on automating high-power household assets such as heating systems.
The solution already exists in the market. Smart controls, such as the Passiv Smart Thermostat, can automatically respond to signals from the energy system. They reduce or shift demand when the grid is under pressure, while using preheating strategies to maintain comfort in the home. This turns flexibility into something invisible for the user, but valuable for the system. As heating systems evolve, households are shifting from passive consumers to active
participants in the energy system – often described as ‘prosumers’. This creates new opportunities for households to benefit financially from flexibility, particularly through time-of-use tariffs and carbon-aware optimisation. These smart controls can do exactly that.
The UK now has the building blocks of a low-carbon, smart and flexible energy system, but the challenge is alignment. If the Future Homes Standard, Warm Homes policy and SSES framework were more tightly aligned around smart controls and automated optimisation, the impact would be significant: heat pumps would be flexible from day one, households would save energy automatically and the grid would be better able to absorb renewable energy. The UK’s energy transition is no longer just about building cleaner homes or installing cleaner technologies. It is about using energy more intelligently. Smart controls and automated flexibility are not a future concept – they are the missing layer that allows today’s policies and technologies to work together effectively.
ewnews.co.uk
June 2026 electrical wholesaler | 27
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