Residential heat pump installations: the role of vocational education and training
This article presents a short summary of: 'Residential heat pump installations: the role of vocational education and training', by Colin Patrick Gleeson. It originally appeared in Building Research & Information, in September 2015 and is available online at: DOI:10.1080/09613218.2015.1082701.
Meeting European emissions targets is reliant on innovative renewable technologies, particularly ‘renewable heat’ from heat pumps.
Heat pumps transfer heat from a lower-temperature source to one of a higher temperature. This is the opposite of the natural flow of heat. Heat pumps can be used to extract heat from sources such as the ground, air or water which can be used to provide hot water, space heating or used for other applications such as heating swimming pools.
Heat pump performance is driven by Carnot efficiency (the differential between input and output temperatures), and optimum performance requires the lowest possible space heating flow temperatures. This means that heat pump performance is highly sensitivity to poor design and installation. The correct operation of heating system controls is also critical to performance and this places additional demands on installers in terms of commissioning and handover instructions.
Gleeson’s paper raises concerns about the adequacy of vocational training and skills for installing residential air heat pumps. It suggests that few UK installers have formal heat pump qualifications at National Vocational Qualification (NVQ) level 3 and that heat pump vocational education and training is generally delivered through short-course provision where the structure of training is largely unregulated with no strict adherence to a common syllabus or a detailed training centre specification. Prerequisites for short-course trainees is limited and proof of ‘experience’ is an accepted alternative to formal educational qualifications.
The paper suggests that the lack of broader educational content and deficiencies in engineering knowledge will have profound negative impacts on the performance and market acceptance of heat pumps.
A range of possible futures are identified to address these problems.
Click here to read the full paper.
--Building_Research_&_Information
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings Wiki:
- Absorption heat pump.
- A decade for heat pumps.
- Air source heat pumps.
- BSRIA domestic hot water heat pumps testing.
- Coefficient of Performance CoP.
- Domestic heat pumps and the electricity supply system.
- Dynamic thermal modelling of closed loop geothermal heat pump systems.
- Earth-to-air heat exchangers.
- Ground source heat pumps.
- Heat exchanger.
- Heat pump.
- Heat recovery.
- Phase change.
- Renewable energy sources: how they work and what they deliver: Part 3: Electrically driven heat pumps DG 532 3.
- Water source heat pumps.
Featured articles and news
Costs and insolvencies mount for SMEs, despite growth
Construction sector under insolvency and wage bill pressure in part linked to National Insurance, says report.
The place for vitrified clay pipes in modern infrastructure
Why vitrified clay pipes are reclaiming their role in built projects.
Research by construction PR consultancy LMC published.
Roles and responsibilities of domestic clients
ACA Safety in Construction guide for domestic clients.
Fire door compliance in UK commercial buildings
Architect and manufacturer gives their low down.
Plumbing and heating for sustainability in new properties
Technical Engineer runs through changes in regulations, innovations in materials, and product systems.
Awareness of the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism
What CBAM is and what to do about it.
The new towns and strategic environmental assessments
12 locations of the New Towns Taskforce reduced to 7 within the new towns draft programme and open consultation.
Buildings that changed the future of architecture. Book review.
The Sustainability Pathfinder© Handbook
Built environment agency launches free Pathfinder© tool to help businesses progress sustainability strategies.
Government outcome to the late payment consultation, ECA reacts.
IHBC 2025 Gus Astley Student Award winners
Work on the role of hewing in UK historic conservation a win for Jack Parker of Oxford Brookes University.
Future Homes Building Standards and plug-in solar
Parts F and L amendments, the availability of solar panels and industry responses.
How later living housing can help solve the housing crisis
Unlocking homes, unlocking lives.
Preparing safety case reports for HRBs under the BSA
A new practical guide to preparing structural inputs for safety cases and safety case reports published by IStructE.
Male construction workers and prostate cancer
CIOB and Prostate Cancer UK encourage awareness of prostate cancer risks, and what to do about it.





















