Hi LegalBeagles: Below is a lengthy description of my 3 years of heating hell! I really hope someone can offer some advice for me and my family.
The background: in 2015 a Cornish company approached me with the offer of a free external Biomass Boiler system. The offer was based on the governments Domestic Renewable Heating Initiative (RHI). There were two choices of this system.
1. I pay to have the boiler installed and I could them claim the governments RHI payments which totalled about £18,000 over 7 years (quarterly payments).
2. The company install the system for free with no deposit or costs. The would give a loan for the £18,000 but there is no cost to the me as the company then claim the full RHI payments over the 7 years. The company maintain the boiler for free during this time.
This part of the agreement is all fine and I am only providing this as information regarding the setup.
I chose option 2, I took out a loan with the company (all correctly handled and regulated). I obviously didn't actually receive any money as they then installed the boiler and supporting system and then claim the RHI payments to complete the loan payments.
The problem I have is with the lack of reliability of the system. I have a full log of breakdowns since 28/04/18 when the boiler was first commissioned. To give a summary we have had 160 days without heating since installation 3 years and 7 months ago (12% of the time the system is not working). This is from 22 separate breakdowns. The longest two were 39 days and 32 days (without heating) but more commonly they are 1 - 10 days. We are currently on day 11 of our most recent breakdown and it looks like the fix won't take place until Monday (day 16 or breakdown).
The company who installed and maintained the boiler have always been quick to respond to faults. In August 2017 after a huge number of issues they even replaced the boiler, but the issues still continued with the new one. It's difficult because despite the efforts of the company the boiler kept breaking down again and again. There were a couple of occasions where I feel the company let me down regarding contact, but on the whole they did try, maybe their engineers weren't skilled enough, maybe the boiler was just not appropriate for my old stone house or maybe this is just a poor design of product, either way, despite all their efforts the company just couldn't keep it running reliably. At its best every few months it WILL breakdown.
It October 2017 the company went in to voluntary liquidation. As a result their assets (including my loan and other similar loans) were sold off. My loan along with the contractual demands of maintaining the boiler we sold to an independence investor. A seemingly honest and reasonable man, however, we are still in the same situation regarding breakdowns. He has paid to have a shed built around the boiler to prevent water getting into the system (this was the reason for a few breakdowns), he has responded to all breakdowns to get engineers out to fix problems but we are on breakdown 4 of 2018.
In summary, it seems that the company and new investor have been reasonable in attempting to fix my boiler but unfortunately after 3 years and 7 months of breakdowns and fixes I feel I have reached my limit. The number of cold days we have endured and the cost of trying to provide some relief with electric heaters has gone on too long. Before going into liquidation the installing company did once reimburse me £100 for electric, but I estimate the cost to me for buying coal, wood, electric heaters, electric has been over £550.
I have previously asked the company (on a couple of occasions) to remove this system but they refused. All I am offered is fix after fix. I am hoping that there is now a legal avenue I can pursue to force the new investor to refund me? Remove the system and replace with oil like my original one that was removed (it was a working system)? Or with the installing company going into liquidation am I stuck for another 3 and ½ years with this system?
I can’t just remove it myself and have another installed…. I have a loan agreement which the RHI payments pay.
Thank you for taking the time to read my lengthy explanation, I appreciate any support you can offer.
The background: in 2015 a Cornish company approached me with the offer of a free external Biomass Boiler system. The offer was based on the governments Domestic Renewable Heating Initiative (RHI). There were two choices of this system.
1. I pay to have the boiler installed and I could them claim the governments RHI payments which totalled about £18,000 over 7 years (quarterly payments).
2. The company install the system for free with no deposit or costs. The would give a loan for the £18,000 but there is no cost to the me as the company then claim the full RHI payments over the 7 years. The company maintain the boiler for free during this time.
This part of the agreement is all fine and I am only providing this as information regarding the setup.
I chose option 2, I took out a loan with the company (all correctly handled and regulated). I obviously didn't actually receive any money as they then installed the boiler and supporting system and then claim the RHI payments to complete the loan payments.
The problem I have is with the lack of reliability of the system. I have a full log of breakdowns since 28/04/18 when the boiler was first commissioned. To give a summary we have had 160 days without heating since installation 3 years and 7 months ago (12% of the time the system is not working). This is from 22 separate breakdowns. The longest two were 39 days and 32 days (without heating) but more commonly they are 1 - 10 days. We are currently on day 11 of our most recent breakdown and it looks like the fix won't take place until Monday (day 16 or breakdown).
The company who installed and maintained the boiler have always been quick to respond to faults. In August 2017 after a huge number of issues they even replaced the boiler, but the issues still continued with the new one. It's difficult because despite the efforts of the company the boiler kept breaking down again and again. There were a couple of occasions where I feel the company let me down regarding contact, but on the whole they did try, maybe their engineers weren't skilled enough, maybe the boiler was just not appropriate for my old stone house or maybe this is just a poor design of product, either way, despite all their efforts the company just couldn't keep it running reliably. At its best every few months it WILL breakdown.
It October 2017 the company went in to voluntary liquidation. As a result their assets (including my loan and other similar loans) were sold off. My loan along with the contractual demands of maintaining the boiler we sold to an independence investor. A seemingly honest and reasonable man, however, we are still in the same situation regarding breakdowns. He has paid to have a shed built around the boiler to prevent water getting into the system (this was the reason for a few breakdowns), he has responded to all breakdowns to get engineers out to fix problems but we are on breakdown 4 of 2018.
In summary, it seems that the company and new investor have been reasonable in attempting to fix my boiler but unfortunately after 3 years and 7 months of breakdowns and fixes I feel I have reached my limit. The number of cold days we have endured and the cost of trying to provide some relief with electric heaters has gone on too long. Before going into liquidation the installing company did once reimburse me £100 for electric, but I estimate the cost to me for buying coal, wood, electric heaters, electric has been over £550.
I have previously asked the company (on a couple of occasions) to remove this system but they refused. All I am offered is fix after fix. I am hoping that there is now a legal avenue I can pursue to force the new investor to refund me? Remove the system and replace with oil like my original one that was removed (it was a working system)? Or with the installing company going into liquidation am I stuck for another 3 and ½ years with this system?
I can’t just remove it myself and have another installed…. I have a loan agreement which the RHI payments pay.
Thank you for taking the time to read my lengthy explanation, I appreciate any support you can offer.
Comment