Boost energy-saving advice to households to curb winter bills, Government told

Climate Change Committee says reducing energy demand is the ‘biggest gap’ in the Government’s energy policy.
The Government has been urged to enhance its energy advice service (Andrew Matthews/PA)
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Emily Beament9 November 2022
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The Government must boost its energy-saving advice to households to help cut costs for consumers and the Treasury this winter, its climate advisers have said.

The UK is exposed to fluctuations in the price for fossil fuels, which have forced the Government to commit tens of billions of pounds in support and still left homes and businesses facing an extra £1,300 on average annual bills, Climate Change Committee chairman Lord Deben said.

In a letter to Chancellor Jeremy Hunt, Lord Deben said decarbonising the UK’s economy and conserving energy could curb exposure to fossil fuel price shocks – but reducing energy demand was now the “biggest gap” in Government policy on the issue.

The UK’s recent record on reducing emissions from heating buildings is “particularly poor”, he warned, due to under-investment, with the number of energy efficiency measures installed each year falling from 2.3 million a decade ago to fewer than 100,000 in 2021.

And he said it was “regrettably” too late to introduce new policies to bring in widespread improvements to the fabric of buildings for this winter – but there were many small changes which could still save energy, and cash for households.

Lord Deben urged the Government to enhance its energy advice service, so it had information on simple energy-saving measures, not just complicated home retrofits, and for the “help for households” campaign to say more about how to save energy.

Simple, no-cost steps such as adjusting radiator valves in less-used rooms, reducing boiler flow temperatures and closing the curtains at night, and low-cost measures such as insulating hot water tanks and draught proofing windows, doors and letterboxes can all save money.

Better information and advice on energy-saving measures could save individual households several hundred pounds, while the Exchequer could save hundreds of millions of pounds from the energy price guarantee, the letter argues.

The next two years should be a period for a concerted push to improve rates of loft and cavity wall insulation, draught-proofing and installing modern tools to manage energy use

Lord Deben, Climate Change Committee

And energy efficiency should be a core part of the Government’s exit strategy from expensive bill subsidies, Lord Deben said.

“The next two years should be a period for a concerted push to improve rates of loft and cavity wall insulation, draught-proofing and installing modern tools to manage energy use, such as smart thermostats, thermostatic radiator controls and smart meters,” the letter urges.

With higher prevailing energy prices, investments in energy efficiency measures are recouped faster through savings on fuel bills, it said.

Efforts should focus on areas that provide high value for money, such as cavity wall and loft insulation, or low upfront costs such as hot water tank insulation, and on insulating fuel-poor homes with measures including solid wall insulation.

And the committee called for the temporary removal of green levies on electricity bills – part of the support package from the Government – to continue, with the costs taken into the Exchequer.

That would incentivise the use of low-carbon, efficient heat pumps which run on electricity.

To pay for the measures, there should be a shift from public funding for bill subsidies to energy efficiency investment, expanding funding pots for policies that already work to decarbonise homes, with the Government set to recoup some of the money spent on the price guarantee through energy savings.

The Government also needs to unlock low-cost finance for private homeowners to improve the energy efficiency of their properties.

It needs to ensure long-term stability in policy to make sure companies invest in the sector, address skills shortages, take forward minimum efficiency rules for private rented homes and speed up the introduction of high standards for new buildings, as well as enforcement to make sure standards are met.

“Collectively, these actions can protect the UK’s fiscal health in the near term while building longer-term energy security and permanently reducing UK emissions,” Lord Deben tells the Chancellor in the letter.

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