Thursday, 02 September 2010

Consultants predict end of eco-towns

Labour’s eco-town programme appears to have ‘bitten the dust’ following this week’s Budget, according to consultancy EC Harris.

The Budget included a £400 million package to kickstart stalled developments but set aside just £100 million for new build housing built to high-quality environmental standards, all of which would be allocated to councils.

Rebecca Bennett Casserly, head of residential affordable at EC Harris, acknowledged that the Budget included a £1 billion stimulus package to tackle carbon reduction.

But she said it was ‘uncertain’ how much of that would impact directly on housing.

‘It does feel like Labour’s eco-town initiative has finally bitten the dust and turned into a meagre £100 million council-led building programme’, she added.

Ms Bennett Casserly said that the £80 million allocated in the Budget to Homebuy Direct was likely to support the purchase of 4,000 homes. She said that this was ‘not enough in our view’.

She added that the Homes and Communities Agency had been the big winners on the day: ‘Its three main business drivers were dominant in Darling’s Budget, namely: housing delivery; employment and training and environmental sustainability.’

The Communities and Local Government department denied the eco-town claim. In a statement it said: ‘We expect the majority of eco-town costs to be met by private developers. Public funding could also be available - for instance for delivering any large infrastructure - from the existing Growth Fund, which was not affected by the Budget.”

Have your say

You must sign in to make a comment

sign in register

Related

Articles

  • Budget fails to address demand for homes

    25 March 2010

    Housing bodies welcomed the announcements in yesterday’s Budget, but warned more will be needed to meet demand for affordable housing.

  • Party poopers

    01/04/2010

    Two years ago the Tenant Services Authority invited anyone who wanted to become a provider of social housing to register with it. So why haven’t people been rushing to join the party? Isabel Hardman investigates

  • Labour’s legacy

    07/05/2010

    In 1997 we were promised that things could only get better for social housing. So after 13 years in power - and nine housing ministers - did Labour deliver? Keith Cooper looks back on a time of both great achievement and missed opportunity

  • A question of capacity

    04/12/2009

    Billion pound payouts from the government have made it a bonanza year for affordable housing development funding. But what will the cash deliver? IH polled the country’s top developing landlords to find out

  • HCA spends £5.6billion to beat targets

    12 April 2010

    The Homes and Communities Agency has said it has met or exceeded its main targets for 2009/10.

Resources

  • Uncertain times

    29 June 2010

    Katherine Evans, partner at law firm TLT, examines how changes in planning are affecting the social housing sector

  • In the balance

    7 May 2010

    In recent weeks the leaders of the three main political parties have all been interviewed by Inside Housing. With the make-up of the next UK government still in doubt, here is what the various options could mean for the housing sector.

  • Eco doctor: green building

    04/09/2009

    David Pinckney presribes five ways to help us build green in the red

  • How to…

    19/02/2010

    …become a sustainable council and lead local transformation by example

  • How to cost-effectively retrofit existing housing stock

    04/09/2009

    Typically, an existing home gives off more than double the carbon emissions (and has twice the fuel costs) of a new house.

Latest Jobs