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Faster progress is needed to decarbonise the property sector – claim

The Chartered Institute of Housing’s (CIH) upcoming 2022 Housing Review shows the lack of clear government strategies and insufficient financial incentives are undermining progress on reducing carbon emissions in the residential sector.

The UK has the oldest housing stock in Europe. One in five homes were built over a century ago, presenting a huge challenge in making them healthy, safe and energy-efficient.

Age of UK housing stock:

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Dwelling age

England

Scotland

Wales

Northern Ireland

UK

Percentages

 

Dwelling numbers (thousands)

 

Pre-1919

          5,139

           469

           441

                         82

       6,131

22

1919-1944

          2,590

           281

           143

                         68

       3,082

11

1945-1964

          4,164

           530

           235

                      126

       5,055

18

1965-1980

          4,684

           529

           261

                      189

       5,663

20

Post-1981

          6,968

           667

           358

                      315

       8,308

                   29

Total

        23,545

        2,476

        1,438

                      780

     28,239

                100

What’s more, the residential sector accounts for 20% of the UK's total carbon emissions.

New analysis from the Office for National Statistics shows that the age of a property is the most significant factor in determining its energy efficiency, ahead of fuel type and property type.

Almost all homes built since 2012 in England and Wales have a high energy efficiency rating (EPC band C or above), compared with just 12% of those built before 1900 in England, and 8%t of homes built before 1900 in Wales.

In response to this, the UK government has set a goal for fuel-poor homes (households where the cost of heating is high relative to income) in England to reach EPC C or higher by 2030, contributing to the UK-wide net-zero 2050 target. At present, just 42% of homes are rated EPC C or higher.

CIH says the zero-carbon challenge is significant, and analysis for the 2022 UK Housing Review shows that progress is not moving fast enough to achieve either long-term or short-term targets.

In England, the government has allocated £4 billion of funding for decarbonisation of housing from 2022-25, but this is much less than the £9.2 billion promised in the Conservative election manifesto. It is also a fraction of the government’s estimate that £35-65 billion of investment is needed by 2035.

Meanwhile, the Scottish Government has allocated £1.8 billion over five years against a total decarbonisation cost of £33 billion (including non-domestic buildings).

In Wales, where the total retrofit bill is estimated at £15 billion, only small pilot schemes are so far being funded. The picture is similar in Northern Ireland, where achieving EPC C is estimated to cost £2.4 billion.

According to CIH, lack of clear strategies and insufficient financial incentives are key problems, as governments continue to focus their priorities on changing heating systems without giving equal priority to improving the energy efficiency of the fabric.

The House of Commons Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Select Committee recently noted that without a clear plan, the government will not meet its net-zero target. The recent Levelling Up white paper included little detail on net-zero, with the ‘green industrial revolution and transition to net zero’ close to the bottom of its 16 priorities.

John Perry, senior policy adviser at the Chartered Institute of Housing, says: “The UK government’s levelling-up agenda will fail if too little action is taken to ensure that the six million UK homes that are over a century old meet modern requirements.”

“Significant extra funding and a clear timetable of action is needed to achieve decarbonisation of the residential sector whilst ensuring minimum disruption to residents and support for those in fuel poverty.” ­­­

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