A committee of MPs says EPCs are not fit for purpose, because they look at the cost and efficiency of heating a home, rather than actively supporting decarbonisation.
The Energy Security and Net Zero Committee says EPCs are not fit for purpose because they “often recommend consumers install a new gas boiler rather than a heat pump.”
The committee wants EPCs redesigned to address both home heating costs and emissions.
The criticism is just one of many in the all-party committee’s recent report.
The MPs call for a new national Warm Homes Advice Service, with indications that a tailored service signposting consumers to advice, certified installers and financial support could give a return of £15 for every £1 spent on it.
But the Committee also points to key steps that need to be taken to build confidence and competence in the retrofit programmes, to underpin the advice service and steer Government’s ambitions to deliver warm homes back on track.
Four in five homes that will be occupied in 2050 have already been built and most will need retrofitting with low carbon heating systems and energy efficiency improvements for the UK to achieve net zero emissions: that’s 29m homes that need retrofitting by 2050 to achieve the Government’s emission reduction targets.
The committee claims that upgrading all homes to at least EPC level C would deliver £40 billion in economic benefits in the next five years alone, and up to £100 billion in further benefits over the following decade.
It would also make homes warmer, healthier and potentially cheaper to heat, reducing levels of cold-related illnesses and mental health conditions and potentially saving the NHS £2 billion by 2030.
The MPs suggest that today there are 98% fewer energy efficiency measures being installed in homes compared to the trajectory the UK was on in 2010. And the MPs claim that key to restoring consumer confidence is to deliver on the promise to bring down the cost of electricity relative to gas, with reducing the proportion of energy policy costs levied on electricity bills the most immediate and simple way to achieve that.
Right now, the typical household pays roughly the same amount for gas as electricity, despite using four times more gas.
The committee continues: “While this rebalancing must be done sensitively to accommodate those remaining on the gas network, many of the poorest consumers, using direct electric heating, would benefit most from this change.
“There have been too many, stop-start Government support schemes – at least 10 since 2013 – almost all with short-term funding.”
The committee says this is failing to provide consumers, installers, investors or the wider supply chain with confidence needed to restructure the market to deliver warmer, healthier and lower carbon homes.
Early estimates are that around 250,000 homes could be un-mortgageable due to spray foam insulation but this may not capture the true scale of the problem.
The committee is calling for a national workforce accreditation scheme to ensure people who do take the steps to upgrade their homes know who they can trust and do not instead face remediation works.
Bill Esterson, the Labour MP who chairs the committee, says: “The UK’s disastrous lost decade for clean, secure energy is nowhere more evident than in the project to decarbonise and reduce costs for home heating: we are shockingly 98% below the levels of energy efficiency measures being installed in homes relative to the trajectory we were on in 2010.
“The committee’s report sets out practical, urgent measures to build the consumer, investor and supply chain confidence needed to deliver the Government’s warm homes plans and its central contribution to the energy transition and Net Zero goals.
“Crucially, we need action now on reducing the costs of energy bills. The key will be to reduce the impact of the gas price on what we pay for electricity, but we could achieve a quick win by reducing the policy costs currently on electricity relative to gas.
“We recognise the legacy this Government inherited and its efforts to move forward but in an ongoing cost-of-living crisis time really is money, and money that we can’t afford. We need clear signals and certainty but more than that we need to start delivering lower energy bills to get this crucial element of clean, secure energy for Britain back on track.”
This article is taken from Landlord Today