In a playful yet poignant display, Good Energy has transformed Southsea Model Village into “Sunshine Place,” a miniature neighborhood showcasing the potential of renewable energy in everyday life.
The installation features tiny eco homes equipped with solar panels and heat pumps, alongside miniature figures of prominent political figures, including Energy Secretary Ed Miliband and Reform UK leader Nigel Farage, symbolising the national discourse on climate policy.
We tour the tiny village and explore what message the village is trying to highlight.
Miniature homes, major message
The village include 12 homes that have renewable energy installed(Image credit: Good Energy)
The miniature village showcases 12 new tiny homes outfitted with solar panels and heat pumps, along with eight retrofitted buildings – demonstrating that even the most compact properties can embrace renewable tech.
Nigel Pocklington, CEO of Good Energy, said: “Small changes can have a big impact. Sunshine Place demonstrates what a greener, cleaner future could look like in the UK.”
Public placards explain energy subsidies, tackle myths about green tech, and make the case for more funding to ensure fairer access to clean home heating.
Mini politicians, real policy debate
The miniature village highlights the political debate around renewable energy with tiny figures of Ed Miliband and Nigel Farage arguing(Image credit: Good Energy)
In a creative twist, Sunshine Place includes handmade models of well-known political figures to highlight the spectrum of opinions in the UK’s energy debate. Among them:
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Ed Miliband, Labour’s Energy Secretary and clean energy champion
Max Wilkinson, Liberal Democrat MP and original sponsor of the Sunshine Bill
Miatta Fahnbulleh, Labour Minister for Energy Consumers, advocate for Warm Homes and Clean Heat plans
Stephen Morgan, Labour MP for Portsmouth South and backer of energy bill support for local families
Nigel Farage, Reform UK MP and outspoken critic of green energy policies
By staging this visual clash between renewable advocates and sceptics in miniature form, Good Energy hopes to spark public and political imagination on what a truly sustainable future could look like.
Sunshine Bill reboot and policy push
Alongside the model village, Good Energy has written to MPs urging a revival of the now-defunct Sunshine Bill, which would mandate solar panels on all new homes. The campaign also calls for:
Removing green levies from electricity bills and shifting them into general taxation
More government funding for lower-income households to access heat pumps and solar
Accelerated political action ahead of a looming energy affordability crisis
“Helping people understand their options, the grants available, the money they can save, and their contribution to the nationwide push towards net zero is what has guided this feel-good campaign,” said Pocklington.
With household emissions still accounting for 17% of the UK’s carbon output, Sunshine Place delivers a serious message in a fun-sized format; when it comes to climate solutions, scale shouldn’t limit ambition.
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