Heating and Ventilating

 

West Country could miss out on green jobs, warns report

A new report published today by renewable energy experts Regen SW, reveals that 16,000 people are employed by south west construction businesses in making homes more energy efficient but with the right backing this figure could be much higher. 

The report, The South West Retrofit Market Study, warns that, if we don’t act to support the sector now, the region could miss the opportunity to increase the 16,000 jobs and £1.1billion in economic benefits that the sector already supports.

“The south west has some of the oldest, most energy-inefficient houses in Europe, which means our homes are colder, have more expensive bills, and higher CO2 emissions,” said Lee Richards of Regen SW. “This presents an excellent opportunity for the 6,500 businesses in the south west that supply and fit measures such as low-energy lighting and solid-wall insulation.”

He continued: “However, government policy is putting jobs in these businesses at risk. Both The Green Deal and the Energy Company Obligation (ECO), which promised so much, have been beset with budget cuts and bureaucracy.  Over the past year many businesses in the West Country took on extra staff to cope with the promised demand for energy efficiency measures, but policy failures mean that these jobs are now at risk. ”

Local businesses have flourished when local authorities have taken the initiative with schemes such as ‘Warm Up Bristol’, run by Bristol City Council, ‘Cosy Devon’, run by a consortium of Devon Councils, and the Energy@Home Partnership, run by Bath and North East Somerset. 

To ensure that businesses in the south west are able to take advantage of the huge energy efficiency opportunity, Regen SW’s study calls for action on a number of points. It wants the Government to: improve support and incentives for retrofit, to improve householder uptake of the Green Deal; fill in the gaps in market support which fall between ECO and Green Deal support; business support to be targeted at 1,200 retrofit specialist companies that underpin the market; householders to be supported with impartial advice and simple tools to help to decide which measures are appropriate; d households in off-gas, rural and privately-rented accommodation to be targeted for support.

Mr Richards added: “Our research shows that, with 600,000 homes in the south west requiring some form of energy efficiency refurbishment, 2,200 homes per week will need to be treated per week for the next five years.  That’s a significant undertaking and an opportunity to not only secure existing jobs but also increase the size of the market in the south west.”

To download a summary of The South West Retrofit Market Study visit http://goo.gl/S1kYBV

17 November 2014

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