Home insulation policy 'fell off a cliff'

| 3rd July 2022 |
Insulation

Insulating homes is a proven technology that reduces carbon emissions at low cost. 

Pikist
The installation of home insulation measures 'fell off a cliff' a decade ago, the government's own climate advisors state.

We absolutely must be doing something about this at scale - making homes better insulated is absolutely a critical factor. 

There is a “shocking” gap in UK Government efforts to ensure homes are better insulated in the face of soaring energy bills, climate advisers have said.

The Climate Change Committee’s latest report warns that Tory government plans for tackling global warming will not deliver on legal targets to cut emissions in the coming decades.

And the independent advisory committee singled out energy efficiency to make UK homes less leaky and cheaper to heat, along with a lack of action on farming emissions, as particular problem areas.

Renewables

In its annual report to Parliament on the progress being made to tackle the UK’s contribution to climate change, the committee called for action to address the rising cost of living that is in line with cutting emissions to zero over all – known as net zero – by 2050.

A fast, sustained push to improve energy efficiency in homes and switch to electric heating, such as heat pumps, to reduce fossil fuel consumption would help people cope with high energy prices, it said.

The average annual energy bill for UK households is around £40 more than it would be if insulation had carried on at rates seen before policy support was removed in 2012, and British homes are among the most heat-leaking in Europe.

The report calls for the government to consider increased funding for energy efficiency in fuel-poor homes, as well as a widespread publicity campaign for its promised new energy advice service and policies to incentivise home-owners to improve their properties.

The committee also said it supports moving the costs of historical green subsidies off electricity bills and into general taxation to cut energy costs and encourage people to move to electric heat pumps. But more recent arrangements for paying for renewables are saving consumers money through cheap wind power.

Prices

The installation of insulation measures “fell off a cliff” a decade ago, the committee’s chief executive, Chris Stark, said.

He described the situation as a “complete tale of woe”, with an industry devastated by the removal of support in 2012 being expected to gear up again and consumers expected to demand energy efficiency without any policy measures to support them.

“We call this shocking, that’s what it is,” he said. “We absolutely must be doing something about this at scale; making homes better insulated is absolutely a critical factor, especially when we’re experiencing such high energy prices.”

Mr Stark said there are better ways to deal with high energy prices than the package of payments announced by Chancellor Rishi Sunak, who, he said, should be supporting insulation to save on bills.

Mike Thompson, CCC director of analysis, said: “There has never been a better time to insulate your house, with gas prices at the levels that they are, the pressure on imports and energy security.

We absolutely must be doing something about this at scale - making homes better insulated is absolutely a critical factor. 

Help

“This is the time for the government to be bold and to help people to do what a lot of people want to do anyway,” he said.

Asked about the criticism on BBC Radio 4’s PM programme, energy and clean growth minister Greg Hands was unable to say whether the UK was building homes that would later need retrofitting. 

“The report has been published today and I will have to look into that specific charge,” he said. 

The annual report said UK greenhouse gases are now almost half their 1990 levels, with emissions rising four percent in 2021 as the economy began to recover from Covid-19 but still 10 percent below 2019 levels.

Inadequate

For the first time this year the committee has set out progress against a series of on-the-ground changes that need to be made across society to keep the UK on track to end its contribution to climate change.

Of 50 key areas for action, only eight were given the green light for being clearly on track to deliver the necessary emissions cuts, including electric car sales, wind and solar power, and meat consumption.

Areas judged to be significantly off track include electric van sales, charging points, energy efficiency retrofits, new woodland creation, and peat restoration.

There were significant risks with the delivery on 33 percent of the emissions cuts needed, and plans are either completely missing or currently clearly inadequate for a further five percent of pollution reductions required to meet the legal “sixth carbon budget” in the 2030s.

Targets

Meeting the sixth carbon budget requires a reduction in climate pollution of 78 percent on 1990 levels by 2035, on the way to the net zero goal.

The report also warns that the public are increasingly concerned about climate change but people are not sure how they can best take action – with greater public engagement needed.

Lord Deben, the CCC chairman, said the government should provide people with the information they need in areas such as insulating homes, which he said is not being the “nanny state”, and work with local authorities to deliver on energy efficiency.

He added: “The UK is a champion in setting new climate goals; now we must be world-beaters in delivering them. In the midst of a cost-of-living crisis, the country is crying out to end its dependence on expensive fossil fuels.

He rated the government nine out of 10 for the targets it has set, but only four out of 10 for delivery of action on climate change. “I welcome the government’s restated commitment to net zero, but holes must be plugged in its strategy urgently.”

This Author

Emily Beament is the PA environment correspondent. 

More from this author