Thursday, 02 September 2010

Help me help you to save the planet

Housing providers hold the key to meeting UK climate change obligations. Policy makers ignore it at the planet’s peril. Caroline Thorpe delivers the latest instalment in the House Proud series

‘The housing sector could be the get out of jail card for the next government, of whatever persuasion.’

This unequivocal endorsement comes from Alan Simpson MP, chair of carbon cutting advocates the Existing Homes Alliance and, in his own words, ‘the proud owner and constructor of an eco-home’. Mr Simpson, who says his own house generates more energy than it uses, is not alone in arguing that social landlords could be the key to meeting government targets to cut UK carbon emissions by 80 per cent by 2050.

The experts agree that housing has a crucial part to play in the fight against climate change. The facts make it easy to see why. The UK’s 27 million homes contribute 27 per cent of the country’s carbon emissions. Improving the energy efficiency of those homes is a no brainer.

Here, as part of our House Proud campaign which presents policy makers with the case for housing, we explain why.

Building greener homes will not help much. The current government wants all new homes to be ‘zero carbon’ by 2016, a task made no easier by ministers’ refusal to explain what they think zero carbon means. Achieving that ambition would only reduce carbon emissions by 5 per cent by 2050. Clearly it is making the millions of existing homes greener that will count.

That may not be easy and it will certainly be expensive. Homes and Communities Agency boss Sir Bob Kerslake reckons it will cost £500 billion to reduce the carbon footprint of existing homes by 60 per cent.

But the payoff makes it worth it. John Doggart, chair of the Sustainable Energy Academy, estimates the government’s 80 per cent carbon cut will be in the bag if the UK refurbishes 500,000 homes a year for the next 40 years. And, as Mr Simpson suggests, as owners of around 18 per cent of those homes social landlords could do most of the grunt work.

Of course the hypothetical ‘get out of jail card’ comes with a quid pro quo - government cash. Social landlords have earned it. Putting aside the massive practical contribution they could make to meeting the nation’s environmental commitments, landlords’ current environmental initiatives prove it would be foolhardy not to invest in helping them do so. Housing’s present contribution to greening the planet includes pioneering eco-schemes, massive investment in new technologies, educating the population, creating jobs and tackling fuel poverty. Still not convinced? Then read on for the detail.

Social landlords already own England’s greenest homes. The latest English House Condition Survey reveals social homes trounce their private counterparts in the environmental stakes. More than a fifth of social homes rank in the top three energy efficiency bands, compared with just 5 per cent of private dwellings.

It’s the other way round at the opposite end of the spectrum. One fifth of private homes languish on the bottom two rungs of the efficiency ladder, compared with 7.5 per cent of social homes. As the authors of that report put it: ‘Social sector homes tend to be much more energy efficient than those in the private sector.’

Once again, it is the social sector’s innovative nature - in evidence throughout the House Proud campaign - that has seen it get ahead of the curve. Housing associations in particular have been developing sustainable expertise since well before it was fashionable. For example, Black Country Housing Association tenants moved into their landlord’s first super-insulated homes back in November 2000, says Richard Baines, the landlord’s director of sustainable development. That’s getting on for being eight years ahead of the curve - super-insulation becomes part of the national building regulations in April this year. Today Mr Baines is looking ahead to the post-carbon economy.

‘We’ve been working for the last eight years on proving we can use hydrogen fuel cells in a housing context,’ he explains.

Innovation

Social landlords are also leading the new build charge. ‘Some of the first commercially available code for sustainable homes level six properties have been built by a housing association [Metropolitan Housing Partnership] - at Upton in Northampton - and this is exactly the type of innovation we want to see more of,’ says HCA chief Sir Bob Kerslake. ‘In many ways, the social housing sector is leading the way and this should help continue to raise standards, reduce carbon emissions and develop the techniques and skills required for a low carbon economy,’ he adds.

A quick glance at the collective contributions of the winners of the recent Sustainable Housing Awards backs Sir Bob up. As Black Country’s Mr Baines, named green social housing champion of the year at the awards, says: ‘We repeatedly demonstrate that what people say can’t be done can be done.’

And associations are making significant financial contributions to shrinking the nation’s carbon footprint. Black Country HA estimates it has invested an estimated £13 million since 1995; Gentoo has spent £6 million on energy efficiency since 2001, mostly from its own coffers; and award-winning South Shropshire Housing Association forked out £10.6 million on a 91-home biomass heated development that saves 120 tonnes of carbon annually.

The benefits of the sector’s good practice extend beyond environmental gains. Its sustainable efforts are helping the seven million households which, according to the National Housing Federation, are unable to afford to heat their homes adequately. The number of people living in fuel poverty is coming down thanks to schemes such as Anchor Trust’s ‘energy team’ initiative, which shaved more than £100,000 off residents’ gas and electricity bills.

Many schemes also tackle worklessness by developing skills and creating jobs. South Shropshire’s 91-home low carbon development in Ludlow includes plans to create its own wood-chipping business to provide fuel for the site’s district heating system.

Mr Simpson argues that the benefits of replicating such schemes en masse are too great to ignore. ‘There’s no sector that offers the same accessible benefits as the housing sector,’ he says. ‘This is the critical area in which we can deliver huge services and virtuous circles that are all to the public good and the environmental good.’

The Energy Saving Trust, which is helping 20 housing associations improve the efficiency of existing homes through its refurbishment pioneers project, is similarly keen to ensure the sector’s environmental potential is maximised.

‘We would encourage all social landlords to retrofit to as high standards as possible and certainly to go beyond decent homes standards, which means social landlords need to look at their whole stock strategically,’ advises Andy Deacon, the trust’s head of regional and local delivery.

Policy makers ignore this potential at their peril. Housing providers are up to the job. Now it’s up to the winners of the forthcoming election to find the resources to see it done.

The CIH says

The UK has some of the oldest and least energy-efficient housing in Europe. Housing will therefore have a vital role in achieving the government’s target of reducing carbon emissions by 80 per cent by 2050.

Since 2007, the CIH has been calling for a long-term programme to tackle the energy inefficiency of older housing - as well as building new, energy efficient homes. That’s why we are steering group members of the Existing Homes Alliance, a coalition of organisations calling for urgent action to transform housing in the UK. EXHA has just launched its manifesto, urging government to commit to a national retrofit programme which should be an integral part of the drive to a low-carbon economy.

With international talks over a post-Kyoto settlement at a stalemate, the UK government could show real leadership by acting in an area which would make a crucial impact not only to reduce carbon emissions, but to cut energy costs, tackle fuel poverty and improve people’s living conditions and overall wellbeing.

Sarah Webb, chief executive, Chartered Institute of Housing

House Proud statistics: sustainability

Every £1 spent on energy efficient housing saves £0.42 in health costs

Social homes are 10 per cent more energy efficient on average than private sector homes, due in part to landlords’ decent homes improvements

Just 5 per cent of private homes are top rated for energy performance compared with 21 per cent of social homes

Award-winning schemes

Look no further than the sector’s Sustainable Housing Award winners for proof that social landlords are doing their bit to go easy on the planet - both now and for future generations. Between them, the 14 winners rack up the following eco-haul:

  • 38 ground source heat pumps
  • 110 energy efficient homes, including two code level four homes
  • Four years of post-occupancy monitoring
  • One local district heating biomass boiler
  • 50 smart meters
  • 500 eco-information packs
  • 329 low energy heating systems
  • One 50mph waste-sucking system
  • The UK’s first renewable heat incentive

To enter this year’s Sustainable Housing awards, see www.insidehousing.co.uk/events

The campaign aims

House Proud makes the case for housing.

It has three aims:

  • First, we want 250 backers signed up to a House Proud petition.
  • Second, we want each of the three main political parties to include a housing pledge in their election manifestos. (The housing minister and his Conservative and Liberal Democrat shadows have already promised House Proud they will do this).
  • Finally, we want to get the sector fighting housing’s corner as the election approaches. Make housing a key election issue at every opportunity, and encourage staff, residents, friends and family to do the same.

To join the campaign, visit www.insidehousing.co.uk/houseproud/

How to get involved

  • Sign our online petition in support of our three aims to gain 250 backers at www.insidehousing.co.uk/houseproud, get housing pledges into the three main political parties’ manifestos and get the sector to talk up housing as a key election issue.
  • Suggest a housing pledge for the parties’ election manifestos, also at www.insidehousing.co.uk/houseproud. We’ll pick the best and pass them on.
  • Pledge to drop House Proud statistics into as many conversations as possible.
  • Ask prospective MPs what they’re doing about housing and persuade them to sign the House Proud petition.
  • Send us your stories, videos, blogs and statistics about how housing has proved its worth in your area.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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