← Back to Westminster Hall Debates

Home Energy Efficiency: North of England — [Mr Laurence Robertson in the Chair]

06 July 2022

Lead MP

Peter Gibson

Responding Minister

Greg Hands

Tags

EconomyTaxationHousingClimateEnergyLocal Government
Word Count: 12062
Other Contributors: 9

At a Glance

Peter Gibson raised concerns about home energy efficiency: north of england — [mr laurence robertson in the chair] in Westminster Hall. A government minister responded.

Key Requests to Government:

I ask the Minister to outline what more can be done to ensure continued delivery of retrofitting schemes and address the skills gap in green jobs. I also inquire about the commencement date for the new energy company obligation scheme (ECO4).

How the Debate Unfolded

MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:

Lead Contributor

Opened the debate
I am concerned about the high percentage of older properties in the north of England, which are difficult to insulate due to solid walls and planning constraints. Twenty-six percent of the region's carbon emissions come from homes, with Darlington having some of the highest levels of fuel poverty. Insulating homes better can save residents money on heating costs and improve health outcomes. However, North Star Housing estimates that decarbonising a two-bedroom Victorian terraced house would cost £45,500, including £12,000 for solid wall insulation alone, which is not financially viable without targeted support.

Government Response

Greg Hands
Government Response
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Robertson. I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Darlington on securing this important debate. The Government's unwavering commitment to decarbonise the country's 30 million buildings has the welfare of those who most need energy-efficient homes at its very core. Underpinning all our work is the heat and buildings strategy, published in October 2021, which explores different options for low-carbon heating such as hydrogen trials and increased use of heat pumps. We are taking a fabric-first approach to retrofit, ensuring emissions are reduced first regardless of how buildings are heated, supported by £6.6 billion investment during this Parliament for technology trials and capital schemes like the home upgrade grant and the boiler upgrade scheme. Over 13% of homes in the north-west and over 12% of homes in the north-east have received energy efficiency measures under the energy company obligation since its start in 2013, with Darlington at 12.2%. The Minister mentioned that despite progress on energy efficiency—particularly over the past decade—there is still much work to do and cited an increase from just 14% of properties being rated 'energy efficient' when they took office in 2010 to 46% today. He noted that the Government are taking active measures to increase and support solar energy, targeting a capacity growth from around 14 GW to 70 GW by part of this ambition is thanks to the VAT reduction on solar panels introduced earlier this year. The Minister also announced that they laid the draft Electricity and Gas (Energy Company Obligation) Order 2022 before Parliament on 22 June, expecting regulations to come into force in July. He highlighted the Government's investment in skills training for green jobs through initiatives like the BEIS skills training competition, which resulted in over 7,000 new training places for heat pumps and insulation. The Minister stated that fuel poverty is falling in England, from 13.2% last year to 12.5% this year, though it remains unsatisfactory. The Government's future homes standard will be introduced in 2025 to improve energy efficiency standards for new builds. There are ongoing investments like the local authority delivery scheme and home upgrade grant empowering local authorities to decarbonise homes according to specific needs with around £226 million allocated in the north, as well as over £1 billion committed last year alone to domestic retrofitting schemes. The Minister emphasized support for those in the private rented sector through measures such as ending 'no fault' evictions and giving tenants a right of redress. He also mentioned funding like the social housing decarbonisation fund investing £63 million for around 8,000 homes in the north to install energy efficiency measures.
Assessment & feedback
Summary accuracy

About Westminster Hall Debates

Westminster Hall debates are a chance for MPs to raise important issues affecting their constituents and get a response from a government minister. Unlike Prime Minister's Questions, these debates are more in-depth and collaborative. The MP who secured the debate speaks first, other MPs can contribute, and a minister responds with the government's position.