Green Deal Consultation: UK Green Building Council’s, Policy and Campaigns Consultant, Richard Griffiths analyses what’s in the long-awaited paper…
The long-awaited Green Deal consultation was finally released on Wednesday, with organisations across the building industry keen to find out whether the proposals would live up to the DECC hype that has surrounded the development of the scheme so far. Much has been promised, with Chris Huhne and his ministerial colleagues repeatedly telling us all that the Green Deal would deliver “the biggest home refurbishment programme since WWII”. And we all hope they are right. Done well, the Green Deal could be a true game-changer, helping us to refurbish millions of homes across our ageing housing stock – reducing emissions and fuel poverty, boosting the UK’s energy security, and generating thousands of valuable green jobs.
So what does the consultation tell us? In actual fact, at least for those that have been relatively close to the policy development, there is not a great deal of new material to work with. Details of financial incentives to encourage take-up of the scheme are sketchy – while Danny Alexander announced £200m of new cash funding from the Treasury the day after the release of the consultation document, how this incentive will be delivered is yet to be announced. It could be fantastic – let’s wait and see. The only clear statement on fiscal incentives in the consultation document itself is that Green Deal Providers will be able to offer up to £150 (or 5%) “cashback” to consumers, which will they will finance through adding it to the final Green Deal bill. It seems unlikely that many consumers will be drawn to the scheme with an incentive they effectively pay themselves, so much will depend on the alternatives the Government puts forward. Even the best designed scheme is good for little unless it is attractive to consumers, and without the probability of a sizeable market, the private sector will be reluctant to invest in making it happen.
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