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Explore how the Green Deal offers new avenues to address fuel poverty, with recommendations and insights on local supply chains and asset transfers to combat rising energy costs.
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Can Green Deal Solve Fuel Poverty? Phil Beardmore Director Localise West Midlands
Can Green Deal Solve Fuel Poverty? • About us and the project • Green Deal and fuel poverty issues • Green Deal and new opportunities to tackle fuel poverty • Recommendations
About us • Localisation – promoting the benefits of local supply chains for economic, social and environmental benefit • Localise West Midlands is a leading think tank, campaign group and consultancy on localisation issues
About us • Many of the solutions to fuel poverty involve more localised delivery • Track record includes advising local authorities on sustainable procurement and the Green New Deal model • Project funded by ScottishPower Energy People Trust
Green Deal and fuel poverty • Fuel poverty a moving target • Health inequalities • Full cost and hidden cost • Interoperability
ECO and fuel poverty Current picture: • 18m homes with gas supply, 24m homes with electricity supply, contributing £1,470,000,000 annually to CERT, CESP, Renewables Obligation Figures: Richard Baines, Black Country Housing Group
ECO and fuel poverty Who needs ECO to meet Golden Rule: • Hard-to-treat fuel rich: 2,000,000 homes • Hard-to-treat fuel poor: 2,000,000 homes • Other fuel-poor: 2,000,000 homes Figures: Richard Baines, Black Country Housing Group
ECO and fuel poverty • Average £11,000 worth of measures per household x 6 million households = £66,000,000,000 ECO needed • Spread over 38 year lifetime of Green Deal, this means £1,736,842,105 per annum, i.e. £82.71 per dual fuel household Figures: Richard Baines, Black Country Housing Group
ECO and fuel poverty • If fuel-poor households were exempt from the levy, then the average cost per fuel-rich dual-fuel household would be £96 per annum • This is £61 than they are currently pay Figures: Richard Baines, Black Country Housing Group
Green Deal and new opportunities to tackle fuel poverty • Ofgem retail market review • A Factor Four approach – whole-house plus energy advice plus payment method plus money advice • Green Deal repayment methods
Green Deal and new opportunities to tackle fuel poverty • Reprofiling of risks associated with fuel poverty • Asset transfer to fuel poor, not handouts • Role of Community Development Financial Institutions • CHP/Gas grid extension
Green Deal and new opportunities to tackle fuel poverty • Using Green Deal referral fees • Centralisation versus localisation in carbon abatement and fuel poverty • Neighbourhood planning • Messenger
Recommendations • Fuel poverty obligation on Green Deal providers • A flexible definition of fuel poverty • Green Deal packages to be offered at trigger points • Understanding the costs and outcomes
Recommendations • A whole-house, Factor Four approach • Transfer assets to the fuel poor • Use Green Deal to take the drudgery out of fuel poverty • Interoperability of Green Deal systems • Encouraging innovation
Thank you for listening www.localisewestmidlands.org.uk www.twitter.com/localisewm philbeardmore@virginmedia.com www.twitter.com/philbeardmore