(10 years, 8 months ago)
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My hon. Friend is right. Solid wall homes are associated with fuel poverty. Of course, they are more difficult to deal with, which is specifically why measures were needed to help tackle those hard-to-treat homes, when many councils, my own included, had done the easier work on lofts and cavity walls.
I compliment my hon. Friend on the case that she is making on behalf of her constituents, but will she acknowledge that, although solid wall external insulation is critical for some of the older housing stock in our urban and peri-urban areas, it is also critically important for our rural areas, where there is a predominance of solid wall homes, and that often elderly and vulnerable individuals feel now that it is much more difficult to obtain solid wall external insulation?
My hon. Friend has probably, like me, received a briefing from Calor, which has expressed particular concern about the impact in rural, off-grid locations.
In the Minister’s reply in July 2012, he praised Nottingham for its “progressive agenda” and looked forward to visiting the city in the near future to drive that agenda forward. In the event he did not visit, but he did meet me, along with representatives from Nottingham City Homes, to discuss our ideas and experiences to date. Following those positive and challenging discussions, a joint approach was developed between the city council, Nottingham City Homes and local energy efficiency charity, Nottingham Energy Partnership. They drew up the Nottingham energy saving neighbourhoods proposal, a detailed plan to maximise the insulation work on hard-to-treat homes, promote the green deal and spread benefits to private homes as well as social housing, beginning on the Clifton estate, but with the aim of transforming energy efficiency across more than 20 Nottingham neighbourhoods with hard-to-treat houses.
We were delighted to welcome the Energy Secretary to Nottingham last spring to see how the neighbourhood model had been developed and the potential for future works. He visited the Bulwell Hall super warm zone, where solid wall insulation had been rolled out to 350 council and 352 private homes. That project helped identify the factors for success that were incorporated into the energy saving neighbourhoods proposal: a large-scale project attracting funding from an energy company; the role of NCH as a trusted intermediary for council tenants, overseeing resident liaison and ensuring quality; the key role of Nottingham Energy Partnership, a local trusted and independent organisation, in contacting every private owner and facilitating private resident engagement; and support from the city council’s planning department in developing an attractive insulation solution to suit the area. It also demonstrated the potential to support Nottingham’s local jobs plan, employing more than 200 people and supporting local employment and the development of the solid wall insulation industry.
Responding to Nottingham’s energy saving neighbourhoods proposal, the Minister wrote:
“I was delighted to see the ambitious proposals you have developed to deliver the Green Deal across Nottingham, in particular your plans for a neighbourhood wide approach fits our vision for the delivery of the Green Deal.”
Although we were unable to persuade the Minister to provide financial support for the energy saving neighbourhoods proposal, when the Department launched its green deal communities fund the following July, we were delighted to see the similarities to our plan. It seemed clear that in Nottingham we were already pursuing precisely the sort of innovative, cross-tenure, area-based approach Ministers were looking for.
The scheme was launched in Clifton in September last year under the branding, Nottingham Greener HousiNG, and was an immediate success. As I explained in last Monday’s estimates day debate, the scheme offered external wall insulation at an affordable fixed price based on property type, so private residents paid a contribution of between £1,000 and £1,300 depending on whether they lived in a bungalow, mid-terrace, end-terrace or semi-detached house. Most residents chose to fund their contribution using savings or via informal help from family and 10% took up the option of a loan from Nottingham Credit Union, which was low cost and could be repaid early without incurring a penalty. None chose to utilise green deal finance, even though the option was set out alongside others available.
The remainder of the cost—around 85%—was funded by British Gas as part of its energy company obligation. The insulation works were rolled out street by street across the Clifton housing estate, to council properties and privately owned homes alike. As residents saw their estate being transformed and heard neighbours describe their warm homes and lower bills, demand continued to grow. Within weeks, hundreds of residents had signed up and by the end of November more than 90% of council tenants had agreed to have the work done and there was 65% take-up in the private sector, with more than 1,000 private residents or landlords having signed up and paid their contribution towards getting the work done.
The feedback from residents was overwhelming. People told me that their homes were warm for the first time ever and that they were saving money and were excited about the improved appearance of the estate. Those signed up were impatient for work to start on their homes.
The Energy Secretary’s statement on 2 December prompted high anxiety in Clifton, and that anxiety turned to despair when British Gas used the opportunity of the Government’s policy change to pull out of the Clifton scheme. Last week, the other Energy Minister, the right hon. Member for Sevenoaks (Michael Fallon), responding to the debate, said that I had “suggested” that our Clifton scheme was
“a victim of the changes taking place in the ECO arrangements.”—[Official Report, 3 March 2014; Vol. 576, c. 722.]
I did not suggest it, I quoted the statement from British Gas in which it said,
“In light of the Government’s proposed changes to the ECO, it was necessary for us to review our current ECO contracts. These changes mean we can no longer fund some projects and unfortunately this is the case with our planned programme with VolkerLaser and Nottingham City Homes”.
It could not be clearer. The Minister’s Government’s ECO changes have led to the collapse of our energy efficiency scheme. As a direct result of his policy shift, hundreds of my constituents in Clifton who have paid for solid wall insulation do not know whether they will get it.
I thank the Minister for his intervention. Unfortunately, my constituents are both scared and alarmed. They will, however, welcome his indication that there is hope for the scheme in south Clifton. There are many more people across Nottingham South who do not know if or when they will get the help they need with their fuel bills. They continue to live in cold homes that affect their health and the health of their children.
My hon. Friend is being generous in giving way. In answer to the Minister’s intervention, it is not only householders who are concerned. I have met companies in the midlands and elsewhere that have said that, because of the changes, they are rethinking where they invest and what they prioritise. Although the Minister’s announcement might be very welcome, there is now a hiatus, which is a classic symptom of the Government’s policies—they are having to rejig their thinking to catch up with a misfortune of their own making.