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Tag Archives: Housing
District Heating Good Practice: Learning from the LCIF
August 2011: Two London schemes are profiled in the Homes and Communities Agency’s (HCA) Low Carbon Infrastructure Fund (LCIF) programme ‘lessons learned’ report published today. The Fund was set up in 2009 to provide funding for the district heating infrastructure needed to link housing schemes to new and existing low carbon CHP plants.
- LCIF funding provided £3m to develop the spine heat network for the Greenwich Peninsula. The Greenwich Peninsula, with its proposals for more than 10,000 new homes, is part of a larger, mixed-use scheme including commercial, retail, educational and leisure uses. The full combination of works includes two significant CHP pipework ‘spines’ which capture all significant development areas on the Peninsula
- Cranston Estate, Hackney where £0.5m grant funding was provided to install a district heat pipe for the retrofitting of a CHP plant, providing electricity and heat to three high-density housing estates.
Posted in Decentralised Energy, Library, News
Tagged Decentralised Energy, Greenwich, Hackney, Housing
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Simple energy efficiency measures can save around £322 a year
July 2011: Centrica has just published some work they commissioned earlier this year from the Centre for Economics and Business Research (Cebr), which conducted the largest ever independent analysis of natural gas use in British homes based on 40 million meter readings . The report found that customers who adopted a range of simple measures saved on average £322 each year, and saw a 44 per cent fall in their gas use between 2006 and 2010. The research is presented regionally (hence specific London conclusions presented) and some of the outputs include:
- British Gas has a lower proportion of customers in London than other parts of the country
- Appendix E provides British Gas customers average domestic natural gas consumption by postcode in London
- An indication of potential cost savings that can be achieved in London and elsewhere by the adoption of energy efficiency solutions.
First Accredited Passivhaus In London
July 2011: A timber framed, two bedroom house in Camden has become the first certified Passivhaus in London, setting a benchmark for energy efficient design for the city. Read the full Green Building Press article here.
Posted in Energy Efficiency, News
Tagged Camden, Energy Efficiency, Housing, Passivhaus
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Redbridge greener homes project picks up a third accolade
14 July 2011: Greener Homes for Redbridge was crowned Retrofit Project of the Year at the Construction News Awards 2011 ceremony Tuesday evening in London. The project transformed 20 Redbridge street properties with a range of water and energy saving improvements looking at what it would take to achieve reductions in carbon emissions by up to 80%. Detailed testing after the refurbishments confirmed that at least ten of the properties achieved reductions in carbon emissions ranging from 62% to 82%. Further information on the Greener Homes for Redbridge project on East Homes website here and here.
Posted in Energy Efficiency, News
Tagged Energy Efficiency, Housing, Redbridge, Retrofit
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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.
Posted in Data Store, Energy Efficiency, Library, News
Tagged CLG, Energy Efficiency, Housing, SAP
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Housing ‘eco-retrofit’ completes
13 June 2011: Gifford engineers have completed a comprehensive retrofit project in Harrow that will now be monitored to see how effectively the country’s existing housing stock can be converted into energy efficient homes to achieve deep cuts in carbon emissions.
“A whole house solution for everyday living” has been delivered by Gifford’s Sustainability Team at a 1960s semi-detached house in Harrow, North West London. The team designed a number of energy efficiency measures for the property, including super insulating the building envelope and sealing it to reduce heat loss, a ventilation system coupled with heat recovery, low energy lighting with specialist LED fittings, solar thermal panels, a room-by-room control system and a ‘last man out’ switch to stop appliances being left on stand-by. Read more here.
Posted in Energy Efficiency, News
Tagged Energy Efficiency, Harrow, Housing, Retrofit
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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.
Can fuel poverty in London be eradicated by 2016?
18 May 2011: Fuel poverty affects almost a quarter of London households and is thought to be responsible for around 2,100 premature deaths a year. Is the capital on track to meet the Government’s target of eradicating the problem by 2016? What more can the Mayor and energy companies do to help? The London Assembly Health and Public Services Committee today launches a new investigation into the cost of energy and the role that suppliers and the Mayor can play in helping to reduce fuel poverty in the capital.
Posted in Energy Efficiency, News
Tagged Energy Efficiency, Fuel Poverty, Housing, London Assembly, Mayor
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Housing and Planning Key Facts
13 May 2011: Department of Communities snapshot of the main housing and planning data – includes updated data (national – not regional) for energy efficiency ratings of homes, percentage of homes with loft insulation and percentage of homes with central heating.
Green Deal and Vulnerable and Low Income Households
4 May 2011: The Energy Efficiency Partnership for Homes and DECC held a workshop to discuss the potential implications of the Green Deal for people considered to be vulnerable and/or on low incomes. The workshop was staged to inform how this detail of the Green Deal mechanism might work. The Green Deal workshop report is available to download from the Energy Efficiency Partnership for Homes website.
Posted in Energy Efficiency, Library
Tagged Energy Efficiency, Fuel Poverty, Green Deal, Housing
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Homeowners Unlikely to Take Advantage of Green Deal
3 May 2011: The Federation of Master Builders (FMB) recently surveyed its members and found that almost 44% thought homeowners were unlikely to take advantage of the Government’s flagship domestic energy efficiency programme, the Green Deal, when it launches in autumn 2012.
The Health Costs of Cold Dwellings
7 April 2011: Caring for people made ill by living in cold rented homes costs the NHS £145 million a year, reveals new research launched by Friends of the Earth today. The analysis – The Health Costs of Cold Dwellings – carried out for the Chartered Institute for Environmental Health, found that 655,800 homes in England rented from a landlord or letting agency are so cold they are officially a health hazard, with a bottom-of-the-scale energy efficiency rating of F or G. A regional breakdown of the modelling is provided and suggests that some 82,000 dwellings in private rented dwellings in London are associated with excess cold. The estimated costs to the NHS of not treating these dwellings in London is just under £19m.