Only one in six homeowners have plans to improve energy efficiency of their home in the next five years

Only one in six homeowners have plans to improve energy efficiency of their home in the next five years, according to new research by the EEIG.

Key points from research:
  • New research reveals that only one in eight (13%) UK homeowners strongly considered the energy efficiency of their home when it was bought
  • Only one in 12 people (8%) strongly believe that the government is currently doing enough to encourage people to reduce emissions from their homes
  • Only 5% of people would strongly disagree with the government making energy efficient homes cheaper to buy through higher stamp duties.
  • EEIG comments on the value of a “Green Stamp Duty” incentive to help the UK meet its ambitions Net Zero target.

Only one in eight (13%) people in the UK admit that the energy efficiency of their home was something they seriously considered when they bought it, according to new research from EEIG (The Energy Efficiency Infrastructure Group) which delves into public sentiment towards energy efficiency of homes.

Whilst this figure rises to 29% of those aged 18-34 – more recent homeowners – the findings demonstrate a fundamental lack of engagement with household energy efficiency, which currently accounts for a fifth of all UK carbon emissions and 35% of the UK’s energy use. London homeowners have greater consideration, with 26% reporting that they took energy consumption into account, compared to just 5% in Wales.

And despite national energy supply concerns, rapidly increasing energy bills, and with COP26 just 3 weeks away, only one in six (16%) homeowners in the UK have serious plans to improve the energy efficiency of their home in the next five years. Breaking this picture down regionally, people in the West Midlands and London come out on top with 21% and 30% respectively having plans laid out to tackle the energy consumption of their home, compared to just 5% in the North East and 10% in the Wales.

Taking action

With a generally low consideration of domestic energy consumption across UK, there lies a clear need for further intervention and incentives to tackle one of the greatest challenges facing the world today – climate change. Only one in 12 people (8%) strongly believe that the government is currently doing enough to encourage people to reduce emissions from their homes, showing a lack of public confidence in the government’s efforts to date. These efforts have included incentives such as the recent Green Homes Grant, which failed to establish an effective mechanism for reducing housing emissions in the UK.

EEIG’s research shows that people are willing to see further government intervention; a popular solution is to make energy efficient homes cheaper to buy through higher stamp duties, as proposed by the EEIG. A ‘green stamp duty incentive’ is a mechanism that will make energy efficient homes cheaper to buy, and poorer-performing ones less attractive to purchasers, without imposing costs onto already struggling families.

David Adams, spokesperson for the Green Stamp Duty Incentive, Energy Efficiency Infrastructure Group, comments:

“Even with worries about energy supply, rocketing energy bills and climate change in the press daily, it’s clear from our research this isn’t prompting the magnitude of demand for home energy performance improvements necessary to solve these problems. Clearly, government intervention is necessary to change this trajectory, but so far short-term initiatives have failed to deliver the kind of sustained take up necessary.

“This is why, in the absence of any other viable approach to stimulate and support owner occupiers to act at scale, the EEIG is advocating for the Government to deliver a green stamp duty incentive. This will make energy efficient homes cheaper to buy and will remind those who are buying a lower performing home of the improvements that are likely to be necessary during their period of ownership. It will also encourage people to start thinking about potential improvements to their homes at the time of purchase and plan ahead to realise the rebate. It’s necessary that this type of policy is adopted rapidly to be fair to homeowners and to give the government the chance to reach its target of a 78% reduction of UK greenhouse emissions by 2035.”

How the Green Stamp Duty would work: 

  • As is already a requirement, the energy performance of a house (measured through its EPC) is calculated at the point of sale.
  • The energy demand and carbon performance of the home is used to adjust basic SDLT value relative to a ‘neutral’ SDLT level set by HMT(set annually to ensure revenue neutrality).
  • To encourage the home buying market to place greater value on energy efficiency, the stamp duty calculation will be adjusted down and up:  For a particular house price, the better the energy efficiency, the lower the stamp duty paid.
  • If the purchaser undertakes low energy and carbon improvements within the first 24 months and obtains an updated EPC, they would be eligible for a SDLT rebate
  • Any recognised improvement in a home’s energy efficiency will reduce the SDLT paid.
Illustrative examples of how the stamp duty would work:
Semi-detached two-bedroom house in the Midlands
Average Energy Performance: SDLT Energy Rating of 55
Selling Price £180,000
Basic SDLT £1,100
Adjusted Green SDLT paid £1,060
Retrofit Rebate after installation of green measures £408
Measures undertaken Top-up loft insulation, heat pump, low energy lights
Updated SDLT Energy Rating 69 (good)

 

End-Victorian-terrace three-bedroom house in Manchester with gas boiler, little insulation
Poor Energy Performance: SDLT Energy Rating of 37
Selling Price £240,000
Basic SDLT £2,300
Adjusted Green SDLT paid £3,948
Retrofit Rebate after installation of green measures £2,413
Measures undertaken Wall insulation, loft insulation, floor insulation, heat pump
Updated SDLT Energy Rating 69 (good)

 

New-build three-bedroom semi with air-source heat pump and built to ‘Future Homes Standard’      
Excellent Energy Performance: SDLT Energy Rating of 95 
Selling Price £292,000
Basic SDLT £4,600
Adjusted Green SDLT £421
Measures undertaken No measures needed to be undertaken
Updated SDLT Energy Rating n/a

 

Five-Bedroom 1960s detached house in North Oxfordshire, using gas boiler with empty cavity walls and un-insulated loft
Very Poor Energy Performance: SDLT Energy Rating of 19
Selling Price £550,000
Basic SDLT £17,500
Adjusted Green SDLT paid £35,550
Retrofit Rebate after installation of green measures £20,042
Measures undertaken Wall insulation, loft insulation, floor insulation, heat pump
Updated SDLT Energy Rating 62 (Average)

  

Five-Bedroom detached house in Northamptonshire, a new-build with insulation, gas boiler                                                   
Average Energy Performance: SDLT Energy Rating of 59
Selling Price £575,000
Basic SDLT £18,750
Adjusted Green SDLT paid £17,500
Retrofit Rebate after installation of green measures £7,812
Measures undertaken Installation of heat pump and solar panels.
Updated SDLT Energy Rating 84 (Very good)

  

Five-Bedroom modernised 1950s detached house in Oxford, with a gas boiler                                                   
Extremely Poor Energy Performance: Energy Rating of 8
Selling Price £1,695,000
Basic SDLT £117,150
Adjusted Green SDLT paid £166,510
Retrofit Rebate after installation of green measures £53,506
Measures undertaken Wall insulation, top-up loft insulation, floor insulation, new windows, heat pump, solar panels
Updated SDLT Energy Rating 62 (Average)

 

Kindly shared by Energy Efficiency Infrastructure Group (EEIG)

Main photo courtesy of Pixabay