70% of Labour MPs support ending new fossil fuel boiler installations from 2035
- More than half of all MPs – and 70% of Labour MPs – support “ensuring that all new heating systems have zero-carbon emissions from 2035”, new research by The MCS Foundation finds
- MPs’ views mirror the public’s, with three in five Brits supporting this policy
- Majority of Labour MPs support moving all social and environmental levies into general taxation to cut the cost of electricity
20 April 2026 (London): New polling reveals that a majority of MPs back measures that would mean no new fossil fuel boilers could be installed from 2035, with heat pumps and other zero-emissions systems being the default replacement.
58% of MPs would support introducing this “commitment to clean heat”, with fewer than one in four (24%) opposed to this, according to research conducted by The MCS Foundation. The proportion of support rises to 70% amongst Labour MPs, with only 6% opposed.
Similar polling by The MCS Foundation showed that 58% of adults across England, Wales and Scotland would also support this policy.
Garry Felgate, CEO of The MCS Foundation, said, “A commitment to clean heat is popular with the public, and this new polling of shows it is popular with the Parliamentary Labour Party as well.
“By ensuring that all new heating systems are zero-emissions from 2035, the Government would send a strong signal that the direction of travel is towards renewables and ending dependence on fossil fuels.”
The polling also shows that a majority (52%) of Labour MPs would support moving all social and environmental levies off electricity bills and into general taxation, a step that could help to cut the cost of bills for many more UK households. This follows the Chancellor’s announcement, in the 2025 Autumn Budget, that 75% of the Renewables Obligation would be funded via the Treasury instead of by a levy on bills until 2029 – a move that helped the Government cut bills by £150. Research by The MCS Foundation shows that moving all levies permanently into general taxation would save a household with a heat pump over £500 a year. It would also lift an additional 900,000 households out of fuel poverty, on top of those that benefitted from the measures to cut electricity bills in the Autumn Budget 2025.
The MCS Foundation Media Office