As @JohnMo can you hold them to achieving this figure? What's changed in the design to improve airtightness so that it exceeds passivhaus standard? If this figure is over optimistic just to pass the SAP as-designed stage then once built, if you only achieve 1.5 your actual ventilation heat losses will be 5 times as much, hurting your SAP rating and your pocket! Useful guide to good airtightness practice here
Heating efficiency of 219% will be taken from the Product Characteristic Database - just look up your heat pump model (anecdotally, the fairly standard Mitsubishi Ecodan we intend to fit has a figure of 267% so there are more efficient units out there)
The full SAP procedure guide is a bit overwhelming but covers the calculations in excruciating detail. I'm no expert but managed to dig out specific details that impacted our report. All the similar-but-different sections take much of the same base information and then apply it separately to figure out different parts of the assessment - carbon emissions, energy costs etc. For example, a gas boiler is worse than ASHP for emissions but still good for running costs.
The section you're probably most interested in is 'Calculation of Energy Rating' (starts page 15 of yours) as that determines the A/B/C rating that is the only thing most buyers will care about. Your space heating cost will rise a lot if you miss that airtightness figure.
Are you installing any renewables? Solar or WWHRS? If so I'd expect those to show up as a negative figure, reducing energy costs, under 'Energy saving/generation technologies' on page 18