Insulation: £1bn funding for least efficient homes

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Cavity wall insulation being installedImage source, Getty Images

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The UK has some of the least energy efficient homes in Europe.

An extra £1bn will be spent to insulate the UK's least energy efficient homes, the business secretary has said.

Grant Shapps said the new funding was part of a strategy of working towards an "an energy independent future" for the UK and would save those who benefitted around £310 a year.

The ECO+ scheme will target homes that have a low energy efficiency rating and are in the lower council tax bands.

A portion of the funds will be spent on the most vulnerable households.

The Department for Business, Energy, Industry and Skills (BEIS) said households who currently did not benefit from any other government support would be able to upgrade their homes under the new scheme.

A new £18m public information campaign will also offer advice on how to reduce energy use in the home, "without sacrificing comfort", BEIS said. The advice will include turning down boiler temperatures and radiators to save energy.

Mr Shapps said the ECO+ scheme would "enable thousands more to insulate their homes, protecting the pounds in their pockets and creating jobs across the country".

The scheme will run from spring 2023 for up to three years, and will focus on low-cost measures such as loft and cavity wall insulation.

An already existing ECO scheme is targeted at people in social housing, on low incomes or who are fuel poor.

The UK is often described as having some of the oldest and least energy efficient housing in Europe.

Two years ago, BBC research found 12 million UK homes were rated D or below on their Energy Performance Certificates, which means they don't meet long-term energy efficiency targets.

Currently 46% of homes have an energy efficiency rating of C or above, up from 13% in 2010, according to BEIS

In his Autumn Statement the Chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, announced a new target, to reduce energy demand by 15% by 2030.

BEIS said this target would be backed by an additional £6bn investment after 2025.

Mr Hunt said the ECO+ scheme would help "hundreds of thousands of people" better insulate their homes.

However, shadow climate change secretary Ed Miliband described the scheme as a "reheated announcement with no new resources",

"[It] is far too little too late and will help only a tiny fraction of the millions of people facing a cost-of-living emergency this winter," he said. He said Labour planned to insulate up to two million homes a year.

Greenpeace UK energy campaigner Georgia Whitaker said nearly seven million homes were suffering fuel poverty, while 19 million homes in England and Wales are badly insulated.

"This is a drop in the ocean compared to what people actually need to stay warm and well this winter and in the winters to come," she said.

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