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London’s low carbon projects

London’s low carbon projects. The role of communities. London’s portfolio of energy efficiency programmes. Homes. Public buildings. Commercial organisations. Commercial landlords. Low Carbon Zones. London’s homes: driving our energy future.

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London’s low carbon projects

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  1. London’s low carbon projects The role of communities

  2. London’s portfolio of energy efficiency programmes Homes Public buildings Commercial organisations Commercial landlords Low Carbon Zones

  3. London’s homes: driving our energy future The Mayor’s main programmes:RE:NEW- Retrofit 1.2 million homes with energy efficiency measures by 2015- All cavity walls and lofts insulated where practical by 2015- A whole-house approach – free upfrontRE:CONNECTTen Low Carbon ZonesReducing CO2 emissions by 20.12% by 2012The Mayor’s London Housing Strategy and Beyond Decent Homes

  4. RE:NEW customer journey

  5. Enfield Barnet Technical TrialsTotal of 817 homes treated July – September 2009 Waltham Forest Redbridge Islington Demonstration ProjectsTotal of 8,119 homes treated November 2009 – March 2010 Hackney Brent Barking & Dagenham Newham Tower Hamlets Ealing Westminster Plan-London rolloutTotal of c.55,000 homes to be treated April 2011 – March 2012 Ken & Chel Greenwich Hounslow Ham & Ful Bexley Richmond Upon Thames Wandsworth Lambeth Merton Bromley Sutton RE:NEW locations

  6. RE:FIT – London’s public sector building energy efficiency programme • Energy Performance Contracting approach: The public sector building owner identifies a portfolio of buildings they would like to retrofit, sets a target percentage energy savings and a payback period Insulation Building management technologies • An Energy service companies (ESCOs) carry out the works and guarantee the resulting energy savings • This guarantees the payback of the initial investment with the delivery risk transferred to the ESCO. • Hence this is a cost neutral means to reduce energy bills and carbon footprint of buildings Cooling equipment Low carbon heating

  7. RE:CONNECT – 10 Low Carbon Zones LCZ programme objectives: 20.12% Carbon reduction by 2012 Focus carbon saving efforts in geographical areas Enthuse communities to reduce their carbon output Demonstrate behaviour change with physical measures that can deliver significant savings at the neighbourhood scale Leverage of significant additional funding • Muswell Hill • Archway • Queens Park • Barking Town Centre • Ham and Petersham • Wandle Valley • Hackbridge • Brixton • Peckham • Lewisham Town Centre

  8. Example Zone: Muswell Hill, Haringey • Retrofit projects co-managed with local community group • 15 volunteers trained to advise and market energy saving services to neighbours • Local social enterprise uses Feed-in Tariff revenues to re-invest in energy saving measures + bulk-buying co-op • £350k investment from government to match LCZ funding for schools and community buildings retrofit/solar + educational projects • Council is putting forward £300k loan fund (proto- Green Deal) • 657tCO2 saved (9% saving across Zone); 32% (high) uptake of homes retrofit http://www.haringey.gov.uk/lcz http://www.en10ergy.co.uk/ http://mhsgroup.org/ http://twitter.com/#!/haringeygogreen

  9. Localism • Delivered by local authorities and delivery agents • Recommendations to increase uptake: • Local authority brand more trusted • Local community group involvement is crucial • Need to generate a community presence • Enable neighbourhood referrals • Use local volunteers

  10. The future • Local delivery at a community level will continue to be crucial • Other ways of funding and financing will be needed e.g.: • Green Deal • Energy Services Contracting

  11. Thank you • Emma Strain • Senior Manager - Programme Delivery Environment • Emma.strain@london.gov.uk

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