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UKLPG calls on DECC to reconsider LP Gas

Following the launch of the second phase of the Green Deal Home Improvement Fund (GDHIF) yesterday (10 December), the trade body UKLPG – which represents the interests of the Liquefied Petroleum Gas industry – is urging the Department for Energy and Climate Change (DECC) to review the role of LP Gas in delivering a cohesive off-grid heating strategy.

UKLPG says the continued exclusion of LP Gas from the list of eligible measures under the GDHIF is a missed opportunity to improve the heating efficiency for truly rural off-grid householders. It believes this is an example of inconsistent government policy which is putting rural populations at a disadvantage.

Instead of supporting families in rural fuel poverty, UKLPG argues that successive energy strategies have actually penalised rural homeowners. Data shows that the CERT, CESP and ECO schemes have all delivered substantially greater benefit to urban areas compared with their rural counterparts.

UKLPG chief executive Rob Shuttleworth said: “We welcome the commitment of all political parties to energy efficiency and the eradication of fuel poverty. However, there is still misunderstanding around how these issues affect rural Britain. Indeed, off-grid heating policy continues to be misplaced, limiting consumer choice and failing to address the needs of off-grid households.

“The decision to exclude LP Gas condensing boilers from the GDHIF is a missed opportunity to drive up household energy efficiency, cut energy bills and deliver significant environmental benefits to rural communities that don’t have access to the gas grid.”

In representations to DECC, UKLPG has confirmed that LP Gas is the lowest carbon of all of the off-grid conventional fuels and burns without the pollutants that other conventional and some renewable fuels emit. 

Mr Shuttleworth continued: “Around two million homes, that’s 4.6 million people, do not have access to the mains grid in the UK. However, the widely variable quality and age of housing stock, combined with accessibility (or lack thereof) to infrastructure means that a one-size-fits-all solution to energy efficiency and fuel poverty will not work.

“Currently, truly rural off-grid consumers have to pay for energy efficiency schemes in the form of electricity bills levies, but with little prospect of being able to benefit. While off-grid properties tend to be less thermally efficient and are more likely to have an older and less efficient heating system, they have received significantly lower support for energy improvements via policy intervention, compared with on-grid properties.” 

 

11 December 2014

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