Data Store

energy for london’s datastore provides links to the latest data sets relevant to London (and other regions in most instances) on issues such as energy generation and demand, carbon emissions, housing energy efficiency data, fuel poverty indicators etc.

State of the Environment report for London

July 2011London’s Environment Revealed is the first joint report on the State of the Environment in London, produced by the Greater London Authority, Environment Agency, Natural England and the Forestry Commission. The report looks at the state of London’s environment today, highlights the improvements that have been made, and the challenges the city faces. The report also features many projects and schemes at a local level that have improved the environment in London in recent years. Data presented for the report is also available as an Excel spreadsheet. GLA press release is available here.

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Energy Efficiency Findings from the English Housing Survey 2009

5 July 2011: The detail behind the 2009 English House Condition Survey Headline Report published by CLG in February 2011,  has today been set out in the English Housing Survey: Housing Stock Report 2009, which involved surveying 17,042 households  between April 2009 and March 2010.

Chapter 6 of the report assesses the energy performance of the housing stock in terms of its energy efficiency and CO2 and sets out some interesting findings including that:

  • The energy efficiency (SAP) rating for the housing stock is 53 points  in 2009.
  • Some 15% of all dwellings were in the lowest Energy Performance Certificate Energy Efficiency Rating Bands F and G (SAP less than 39).However, whilst 19% of private rented and 16% of owner occupieddwellings were in Bands F or G, only 6% of all social rented dwellingswere similarly banded.
  • By 2009, half of all dwellings with cavity walls had cavity wall insulation. Solid wall insulation was far less common: only 2% of dwellings with non-cavity walls had external insulation, and almosthalf of these were in the social rented sector.
  • Only 41% of dwellings with lofts had at least 150mm of loft insulation in 2009,
  • In 2009, around a quarter (24%) of all dwellings had either acondensing or condensing combination boiler compared to only 2% in2003. Some 29% of all boilers were less than three years old although the same proportion of boilers were at least 12 years old.
  • Some 2% of dwellings had some form of solar panel system (either photovoltaic panels for micro generation of electricity or solar water heating panels) in 2009.

Chapter 7 goes on to consider the ‘energy improvement potential‘ and concludes:

  • In total 19.3 million dwellings (86% of the housing stock) could benefit from at least one of the cost effective improvements recommended through the Energy Performance Certificate (EPC).
  • The measure that could benefit the largest number of dwellings was replacing the existing conventional central heating boiler with a condensing unit (13.4 million).
  • Generally, private rented dwellings were the most likely to be able to benefit from lower cost improvement measures. The oldest stock was not necessarily the most likely to benefit from cost effective measures because many of these older dwellings have been improved over the years.
  • The average cost of carrying out cost effective improvements would be around £1,400 per improved dwelling.
  • If all cost effective improvement measures were installed, the mean energy efficiency (SAP) rating for the stock as a whole would rise by10 points to 63.
  • On the basis of this energy efficiency rating methodology, the improvement would equate to a potential 22% reduction in heating,lighting and ventilation costs of average fuel bills for households (at constant prices), CO2 emissions falling on average by 1.4 tonnes/year across the whole stock and a total saving of 32 million tonnes/year of CO2 (or 24% of total emissions accounted for by the housing stock).
  • If all cost effective improvement measures were installed, the percentage of dwellings in EPC Energy Efficiency Rating Bands A to C would more than double to almost 40% of the housing stock and the percentage in the least efficient Bands E to G would fall by more than half to 18%.

Unfortunately no breakdown for London or any other regions where these surveys were undertaken is provided. However, a lot of interesting stuff to get through here- and much more in the chapters. The fact that replacing older boilers with newer condensing models was identified as the “measure that could benefit the largest number of dwellings” it seems a bit of an oversight of Government not to have any programme in place (now that the Boiler Scrappage Scheme has now stopped (at least in England) and that the  Warm Front programme is soon to be wound up) to accelerate the take up of higher efficiency boilers. Additionally, the Green Deal, starting in October 2012,  does not include boiler replacement within the measures it will cover.

A breakdown of the statistics behind the report are presented in the English Housing Survey Housing Stock Summary Statistics Report 2009 and a summary of the findings are set out in English Housing Survey Bulletin: Issue 4, both of which were also published today.

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London Energy Prices

4 July 2011: DECC have just published their latest data sets on UK energy prices(PDF report and tables also available in spreadsheet format), which includes a regional breakdown of gas and electricity prices for domestic and non-domestic consumers. London’s statistics reveal that:

  • London ranks second lowest in terms of paying electricity bills by direct debit, hence missing out savings offered by suppliers, as direct debit payment typically attracts suppliers cheapest tariffs  (Table 2.4.2)
  • The average annual London electricity bill is £435 (which is also by coincedence the average for the UK). Bills are calculated assuming an annual consumption of 3,300 kWh (see Ofgem’s Typical Domestic Energy Consumption Figures factsheet for further information).  The question does arise whether such a consumption figure is suitable for London with its higher levels of flatted accommodation…If the consumption figure were lower, it is possible that electricity bills were actually higher for Londoners than reported by DECC
  • The average annual London gas bill is £687 (slightly above the UK average of £681). This based on an annual consumption of 18,000 kWh.
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NEED – Analysis of Household Sector

30 June 2011: DECC has today published some initial analysis on the domestic sector from its National Energy Efficiency Data (NEED) Framework. The initial report covers:

  • How take up of energy efficiency measures has varied between types of property and household.
  • Statistical comparisons of gas and electricity consumption in 2008 by property and household types.
  • Analysis of the savings made by households that have installed energy efficiency measures(for example cavity wall insulation or condensing boilers).

The analysis report finds that  “There are large differences for insulation measures with only 4 per cent of properties in London receiving insulation measures compared to the national average of 13 per cent.

The initial analysis report and two accompanying spreadsheets are all downloadable from DECC’s Energy Efficiency Statistics webpage. A summary of the findings are provided in an article in the June issue of DECC’s Energy Trends journal.

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National Renewable Energy Statistics

30 June 2011: Short article in latest issue of DECC’s Energy Trends quarterly journal, published today, providing the latest national renewable energy statistics for the UK. The analysis finds that “Renewable energy provisionally accounted for 3.3 per cent of energy consumption, as measured using the 2009 Renewable Energy Directive methodology. This is an increase of 0.3 percentage points from the 2009 position of 3.0 per cent.” The UK’s 2020 target is for 15 per cent of UK energy needs to be supplied from renewable energy sources.

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Home Insulation Levels in Great Britain

17 June 2011Statistical release by DECC on the estimates of home insulation levels in Great Britain (April 2011). No regional information is provided unfortunately, however, this release does include an estimate of the number of homes with Solid Wall Insulation (SWI) for the first time – a significant issue for London due to the high proportion of solid wall homes.

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Housing: A Growing City

June 2011: GLA report looking at housing trends in London, from the demand/supply imbalance to the consequences for affordability and housing need.

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Indices of Deprivation 2010 – A London Perspective

June 2011: Greater London Authority briefing on the key findings for London from the CLG Indices of Deprivation 2010 (ID2010), the Government’s primary measure of deprivation for small areas in England. The most deprived areas within London are concentrated to the north and east of the City, from Newham to Islington and from Tower Hamlets north to Enfield and Waltham Forest. Over 26 per cent of London falls within the most deprived 20 per cent of England.

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DECC regional energy statistics

8  June 2011: Latest release of DECC regional energy (gas/electricity) domestic and non-domestic consumption statistics including detailed data for London.

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    Is there a “heat or eat” trade-off in the UK?

    8 June 2011Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) research presents detailed household level expenditure data from older households merged with historical local weather information. The report looks to test “whether there is a  a heat or eat trade off: do households cut back on food spending to finance the additional cost of keeping warm during cold shocks? We find evidence that the poorest of older households are unable to smooth spending over the worst temperature shocks.”

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    Emissions rise at UK universities

    7 June 2011: The People & Planet Green League 2011 assessed the environmental and ethical performance of 142 universities, and has estimated that  carbon emissions at 139 universities rose by 3.9% between 2005 and 2010, even though capital funding for English institutions is now linked to reductions.

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    Carbon emission factors from the UK Greenhouse Gas Inventory

    May 2011: DECC published data which, if you really want to get into the detail, on the ‘Regional Gas Data‘ tab on this spreadsheet, provides a specific ‘Carbon dioxide emission factor for natural gas‘ for London (or ‘North Thames’ as gas companies like to regionally identify London).

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