1. Seven domestic energy use statistics everyone should know

    May 19, 2011

    Seven stunning statistics every housing professionals should know 

    1.   The average UK home emits 6.2 tons of carbon a year

    This is based on an average home, defined as a two up two down semi-detached property. Homes make up over 28% of all UK carbon emissions. This is mainly due to the fact that many of the homes built in the last 60 years have not had a focus on insulation, airtightness or adequate ventilation methods.

    2.   82% of energy used in the house is used in heating the home

    This includes both space and water heating which accounts for 58% and 24% of the total energy used in the average household respectively.

    3.   From Autumn 2012 every home can gain over £6,000 for energy efficiency improvements

    The Energy Security and Green Economy Bill is about to enter the House of Commons. This will enable people to take out a loan to make improvements to a house. This loan will be paid off through lower fuel bills. The Green Deal is expected to save households upto £400 a year and create upto 100,000 jobs.

    4.   Many UK homes could generate over £600 every year from electricity right now

    Feed in tariffThe Feed-in Tariff means that each home owner can earn income for generating electricity. For improvements to existing homes people can earn 43.3pence per kilowatt hour. On a large roof this can equate to over £600. Factors to consider include the angle of the panel. A South West or South East facing panel will be 5% less efficient than a south facing panel. The angle of the panel is important also. A flat system produces about 13% less. This will all impact on your potential Feed-in Tariff returns.

    5.   Water use accounts for over 20% of energy use

    While writing up some work for a housing association that was retrofitting their homes we noticed an important point. Water accounts for over 20% of all energy use in a home. Where we use less water, we also save energy.

    6.   Education can save families over £300 a year

    Our motto is build tight, ventilate and educate right. Research shows that where people understand their homes they are able to save considerable amounts on fuel bills.

    In one research study carried out by Worthing Homes residents saved more from education than they did from £7,000 worth of retrofitting. In some instances residents were saving over £300 more a year. This compared with £38 saved from retrofit works only.

    7.   Retrofits costs range from £7,000 to £40,000 

    Depending on whether you are moving to 20% to 80% less carbon retrofitting a property can cost tens of thousands of pounds.  Many of these costs result from technical aspects of building to low carbon, in particular getting to low air tightness and good ventilation levels in existing homes and renewable technologies.

    Indeed when allowing for monitoring and dissemination of findings the Retrofit for the Future grants allowed up to £150,000 per home. These projects took homes to extremely low carbon levels.


  2. DECC announces 4th Carbon Budget

    May 17, 2011

    DECC announced the 4th Carbon Budget to cut greenhouse gas emissions.
    Click on this link for the details of the announcement:

    4th Carbon Budget DECC


  3. ENERGY BILL – 2nd reading

    May 11, 2011

    The Energy Bill has had its second reading in the House, delivered by Chris Huhne Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change 

     “I beg to move that the Bill be now read a second time.

    Mr Speaker, over the past year, energy policy has been in the spotlight.

    From the Gulf of Mexico to Fukushima, no-one can doubt the importance of our energy choices.

    And for the first time, scientists have linked greenhouse gas emissions to an increased risk of major floods.

    Faced with a difficult financial situation, the Government’s objectives are clear.

    We must secure affordable energy supplies for the future; and we must avoid dangerous climate change.

    Neither will be easy. The gap between our energy demand and our energy supply is growing. We are increasingly dependent on imported energy. We still rely heavily on unclean and unsustainable fossil fuels.

    By law, we must cut our emissions by 80% by 2050. We must get 15% of our energy from renewable sources by 2020.

    Our energy infrastructure is ageing. Our old polluting power stations are shutting down.

    Building the next generation of power plants will take time and money. If we are to cut our carbon emissions and keep the lights on, we must act now.

    And the cheapest way of closing the gap between supply and demand is to reduce the amount of energy use.

    Mr Speaker, the Energy Bill contains provisions to boost our energy security, encourage low-carbon technologies, and improve energy efficiency.

    It places a new obligation on energy companies to reduce carbon emissions and support vulnerable consumers.

    And it delivers a key Coalition commitment: the Green Deal. A self-financing building improvement scheme to bring our properties into the 21st century…”

     

    The full transcript of the reading is available on the DECC website


  4. Government action on low energy efficient properties

    May 11, 2011

    Huhne gets tough on landlords of draughty homes 

    Energy and Climate Change Secretary Chris Huhne has today announced plans to introduce regulations to ensure that all landlords would face minimum energy efficiency standards under the Green Deal.

    Under the proposals, announced at Second Reading of the Energy Bill:

    • From April 2016 landlords will not be able to refuse reasonable requests from tenants, or local authorities acting on behalf of tenants, to improve their property;
    • From April 2018 the government will make it unlawful to rent out a house or business premise which has less than an “E” energy efficiency rating, ensuring at least 682,000 properties will have to be improved.

    The Green Deal is the coalition’s national plan of home improvements to make houses and businesses cheaper to run through better energy efficiency. From next year, people will be able to access finance to pay for the upfront cost of work which will be paid back through savings on lower fuel bills.

    The proposals will help the most vulnerable as more than a quarter of a million of the worst insulated rented homes are classed as fuel poor.

    Energy and Climate Change Secretary Chris Huhne said:

    “Our proposals provide a voice for tenants living in poorly insulated, draughty homes. The Green Deal is a win-win opportunity for landlords by removing the upfront cost of work to upgrade the property making it cheaper to run, more environmentally friendly and ultimately more attractive to rent.

    “For those landlords who don’t take up the Green Deal then we will get tough so that by 2018 the poorest performing rented housing stock is brought up to a decent standard.”

    In the budget the Chancellor George Osborne committed to introduce measures to encourage and incentivise the take up of the Green Deal ahead of its introduction in Autumn 2012.

    Notes for Editors:

    1. Further detail of what’s in the Energy Bill can be found on the Energy Bill page of the DECC website
    2. A household is considered to be in fuel poverty if it needs to spend more than 10 percent of its income on fuel for adequate heating (usually 21 degrees for the main living area, and 18 degrees for other occupied rooms). 

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