Skip navigation and title
Friends of the Earth Cymru / Cyfeillion y Ddaear Cymru

Home > FOE Cymru > Press Releases > Emissions from Welsh homes could be slashed by 80%


Grass
Friends of the Earth Cymru

Making life better for people by inspiring solutions to environmental problems


Ymddiheuriadau. Dim ond yn y Saesneg mae datganiadau i'r wasg Cyfeillion y Ddaear i'w cael. Am ragor o wybodaeth gweler ein Cynllun yr Iaith Gymraeg.

Emissions from Welsh homes could be slashed by 80% but will local councils be up for the challenge?

Carbon emissions from Welsh homes could be cut by 80 per cent by 2050, according to a new report published today (27 November) by the University of Oxford’s Environmental Change Institute [1]. But according to the Wales Audit Office many local councils in Wales are already failing to meet their current 30% reduction target for energy efficiency.

Oxford University’s report, Home Truths, was commissioned by Friends of the Earth and The Co-operative Bank as part of The Big Ask Campaign for a strong climate change law [2]. It assesses the UK Government’s record and sets out, for the first time, a blue print for delivering huge carbon cuts from all homes while eradicating fuel poverty, creating jobs; cutting energy bills; and increasing fuel security [3].

Carbon dioxide emissions from the housing sector have risen by more than five per cent since 1997 and account for 27 per cent of Wales’s carbon footprint. In 2004 the number of households in Wales living in fuel poverty was 134,000 [4].

A Wales Audit Office report published in September showed that all 22 local authorities in Wales have failed to meet the targets agreed by the Welsh Assembly to improve home energy efficiency [5]. It stated that future progress could only be made if the Welsh Assembly Government set out a clear direction and forced councils to focus efforts on improving the efficiency of private sector homes.

The new Home Truths report outlines a comprehensive policy framework at local, national and EU level, for cutting carbon emissions from new and existing homes [6]. It shows how initial UK Government spending of £12.9 billion a year for approximately ten years can deliver 80 per cent cuts in carbon emissions, the elimination of fuel poverty and provide permanent energy savings from UK homes worth £12.3 billion a year. The average household could see their energy bills cut by at least 66 per cent, equivalent to a £425 annual saving at today’s prices.

Investing in low-carbon homes will also help avoid damage from climate change which the Stern Report estimates could cost the UK economy over £100 billion a year by 2050 [7].  

Key recommendations include:

Friends of the Earth's Big Ask Campaign and The Co-operative Bank are campaigning for a strong climate change law that will commit the UK to cutting its emissions by 80 per cent by 2050. Home Truths demonstrates that the Wales and the UK housing sector can deliver this level of cuts in an equitable way.

Anna McMorrin, Friends of the Earth Cymru campaigner, said:

"It is neither cheap nor easy for a householder to make their home low-carbon. The Welsh Assembly along with the UK Government must radically change their approach. The investment required is significant but the economic costs of not tackling combat climate change would be catastrophic.”

Dr Brenda Boardman [8], the report author said:

"This report sets out a win-win scenario. It shows that we can make huge cuts in emissions from UK housing and that we can do this in a way which wipes out fuel poverty and ensures everyone has a warm, comfortable, low-carbon home. The Government needs to drive this transformation. It needs to provide the political commitment and financial support to turn this report into reality.”

Notes

  1. The report outlines how household carbon emissions can be reduced by 80 per cent by 2050 based on 1990 levels.
  2. Friends of the Earth has led the campaign for a strong climate change law through The Big Ask climate campaign (www.thebigask.com). The environmental charity is calling for the law that commits the UK to cutting its carbon dioxide emissions by at least 80 per cent by 2050 and covers emissions from international aviation and shipping from the outset.
  3. The term fuel poverty applies to anyone who needs to spend more than 10 per cent of their income on energy to keep themselves warm and provide other energy needs in their home.
  4. The Welsh Assembly Government’s ‘Fuel Poverty in Wales' report published in 2004, estimated that the number of households in Wales living in fuel poverty was 134,000.
  5. The ‘ Delivering the Home Energy Conservation Act in Wales’ report was published on 13 September 2007 by the Auditor General for Wales.
  6. The report found the Government’s current policies will at best deliver carbon emissions reductions from housing of between 11 and 18 per cent by 2020 (compared to 1990 levels). This is barely half the 30 percent reduction the Government should have achieved by 2020 if they were to be on a trajectory to reduce household carbon emissions by 60 per cent by 2050, let alone 80 per cent by 2050.
  7. Stern estimates that damage from not tackling climate change will be 5 - 20 per cent of world GDP by 2050. Assuming just 5 per cent damage, the cost to the UK economy is over £100 billion a year by 2050.
  8. Dr Brenda Boardman MBE was, until September, head of the Lower Carbon Futures team at the University of Oxford’s Environmental Change Institute (ECI) and Co-Director of the Joint Research Councils UK Energy Research Centre, responsible for the Demand Reduction themeShe is now on sabbatical.


Contact details:

Friends of the Earth Cymru
33 Castle Arcade Balcony
CARDIFF
CF10 1BY

Tel: 029 2022 9577
Fax: 029 2022 8775
Email: [email protected]
Website: www.foecymru.co.uk

 

Nov 2007
Friends of the Earth Cymru

Last modified: 14.12.2007