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Deep concerns over the government’s flagship policy to make 14m homes warmer and cheaper to heat have reached the top of government, with prime minister David Cameron and deputy prime minister Nick Clegg receiving a personal briefing on its troubles.

The green deal aims to provide “pay as you save” loans to homeowners to improve their energy efficiency and cut bills. It is due to launch in October but has faced widespread criticism from energy companies, the building industry, consumer groups and charities. The government’s own impact assessment shows loft insulations and cavity wall insulations – the most cost-effective measures by far – are set to fall by 93% and 67% respectively under current plans. “The impact assessment says it is going to be a train crash,” said Andrew Warren, director of the Association for the Conservation of Energy.

The escalation of the issue to Downing Street came on the same day as official data revealed that average home energy bills have shot up by up 12% – £140 – in 12 months, following a doubling in the past six years due largely to rising gas prices. Furthermore, national statistics on fuel poverty due to be published on Thursday are certain to show a rise from the current 5 million homes, a quarter of the total.

The green deal is intended to address fuel poverty, as well as being a crucial policy in cutting the carbon emissions driving climate change, but the Cabinet Office has been told it will flop unless fundamental changes are made. Warren and a series of other senior stakeholders were interviewed by Cabinet Office officials, who reported to Cameron, Clegg and energy secretary Ed Davey on Wednesday.

May 17, 2012 11:25 am - Posted by admin  | Comments ( 0 )

New industry-backed guide to offer advice and checklists on how firms can qualify to provide Green Deal services

Businesses interested in providing services as part of the government’s soon-to-be launched Green Deal energy efficiency scheme have been urged to begin investigating the opportunities presented by the new financing initiatives as soon as possible, following the launch of a new guide to the scheme.

The Construction Products Association and the Energy Efficiency Partnership for Homes yesterday launched a new free guide, Green Deal Opportunities for Industry, designed to offer firms practical advice on how manufacturers, distributors, main contractors and installers can benefit from the scheme.

Due to be launched in the autumn, the Green Deal will offer households and later businesses the opportunity to undertake energy efficiency improvements at no upfront cost, and then pay for the work through a small levy on energy bills. Under the rules of the scheme, those taking part will end up better off as repayments have to be lower than the savings people will realise as a result of the energy efficiency improvements.

A number of firms recently signed up to the scheme and have indicated they will provide Green Deal services, but the government is keen to grow the number of organisations taking part in the scheme, predicting it will enable a long-term increase in demand for green building services.

Writing in the foreword to the 93-page report, climate change minister Greg Barker praised the guide as “an example of how collaborative working can help companies prepare for the Green Deal”.

May 15, 2012 3:20 pm - Posted by admin  | Comments ( 0 )

The National Construction College (NCC), the training division of CITB-ConstructionSkills, is planning to host a series of Green Deal Awareness workshops throughout the UK to help smaller contractors get work from the government’s Green Deal.

The Green Deal scheme is intended to enable homeowners and businesses to fund energy efficiency work based on future savings from their energy bills. The government expects it to create 65,000 construction jobs when it is launched later this year. The NCC said that it wanted to ensure that construction firms had the knowledge and skills to exploit the opportunities.

NCC director Andy Walder said: “We are urging construction firms to start preparing for the future now. The government’s Green Deal is great news for the industry, but it is essential that businesses make sure that they have the knowledge and skills to take advantage of the new work that will be created by this scheme.

“These workshops will help companies discover and unlock the Green Deal’s commercial and employment opportunities, as well as informing businesses which skills their workforce will require. This is just one of the many ways that we’re investing industry funds to help businesses upskill their workforce to take advantage of business opportunities and to ensure that we are in the best position possible for future economic growth locally and nationally.”

May 14, 2012 9:10 am - Posted by admin  | Comments ( 0 )

The Prime Minister David Cameron has called for a high level briefing from the Cabinet Office on how to rescue his Government’s flagship Green Deal.

There is growing concern that the launch of the Green Deal this October will be a flop. Even the big six energy providers have asked for a delay so that all the details can be finalised.

There is a real fear amongst industry and stakeholders that consumers will fail to buy into the complicated scheme.

There is also evidence that the scheme as it stands could all but destroy the loft and cavity wall insulation industry. The government’s own impact assessment for the Green Deal shows that loft insulation and cavity wall insulation will reduce by 93% and 70 % respectively under the scheme. This document runs to 297 pages, indicating how complex the scheme set-up is.

The Government aims to upgrade the energy performance of 3.6m homes by 2022, which would require around a 1,000 installations every day.

Mike Leonard, director of the Modern Masonry Alliance, said: “Successful consumer campaigns have to be market driven. The needs and requirements of consumers came last in this process.”

May 10, 2012 8:01 am - Posted by admin  | Comments ( 0 )

A new not-for-profit organisation, the Energy Efficiency Partnership for Buildings has been launched to create the largest network of potential Green Deal providers, financiers, product and service suppliers in a hub of expertise to represent industry’s views on the practical implementation of Green Deal, ECO and wider energy efficiency opportunities in the UK.

The Energy Efficiency Partnership for Buildings (EEPB) has received the backing of a significant group of founding members, including npower, Strutt & Parker, Centrica, Kingfisher, Enact and Knauf Insulation.

It is a major relaunch for what was formerly the Energy Efficiency Partnership for Homes, an influential network set up in 1999 which brings together more than 1,300 individuals from 760 organisations in voluntary cooperation across all parts of the energy efficiency supply chain.

The EEPB has become a wholly owned subsidiary of the National Energy Foundation, linking it with one of the longest established bodies of energy efficiency expertise in the UK. The National Energy Foundation is an independent educational charity based in Milton Keynes which focuses on reducing the use of energy in buildings.

Dr David Strong, chairman of the EEPB, said: “The creation of the EEPB comes at a very significant time. Organisations across all parts of industry, all parts of the product and delivery sectors, and all parts of the private and public sector are seeking to collaborate and find answers to how we make the most of the new energy efficiency policies coming through from Government. Similarly, a broad group of Government departments will benefit from the expertise our members can offer.

May 8, 2012 8:25 am - Posted by admin  | Comments ( 0 )

Leading Energy Efficiency Consultancy EECO2 has delivered over £10 million in global energy savings since they began trading just 5 years ago.

The energy savings are displayed on their website at www.eeco2.co.uk . The savings delivered to date amount to an astounding 250,000kWh and 91,000 Co2 tonnes. EECO2 have firmly established their position as a leading consultancy within the pharmaceutical and life sciences sector and work with global giants such as GSK, AstraZeneca, Pfizer, Lilly and Novartis.

Founding Director Rob Wallace said:

“The core expertise & experience within EECO2 is not the usual ‘Consultant’ format as we all come from a design & build background, commercially grounded and totally focused upon the identification & cost effective delivery of identified energy savings. We validate energy savings and are able to demonstrate over £10 million in savings to date.”

April 27, 2012 1:15 pm - Posted by admin  | Comments ( 0 )

CSR has been and is interpreted in many ways with differing organisational importance and values, from occasional volunteering to something that is embedded within an organisation’s DNA and culture.

Defining CSR

Emergence of CSR thinking over the years has blurred boundaries of Corporate Social Resilience, Corporate Sustainable Responsibility and even Carbon Social Responsibility. But in its scope and spectrum lies its strength: with no size fitting all, an organization’s CSR policy and strategy is of utmost importance.

In many ways it defines the organisation.

(Martin Brown writing on CSRWire)

Our next series is, aimed at “Building CSR” and features, among others, presentations from Bob Simpson from Asda with the supermarket giants emerging thinking on Global sustainability. We will also feature Paul Connell from Energy giants Eon with an insight into their CSR Strategy and will finish the series off with our usual exciting, interactive Half-day Conference.

Green Vision at Leeds Metropolitan University is an open Knowledge Exchange Network focusing its 2012 networking series on Cutting Costs and carbon, to drive the Sustainable Building and Asset Management agenda and help shape government thinking.

Building CSR: Emerging CSR Trends,Thursday 3rd May

Bob Simpson, Asda

Paul Connell, EON

Martin Brown, Fairsnape

1730 – 1930 Squire Sanders, 2 Park Lane, Leeds, LS3 1ES

Building CSR:CSR Strategies, Thursday 7th June

Paul Connell, Eon

Others to be announced

1730 – 1930 Squire Sanders, 2 Park Lane, Leeds, LS3 1ES

Building CSR: CSR Reporting Thursday 5th July

Half Day GVis Conference. 1330 – 1730 Old Broadcasting House , Leeds

Leading CSR Thinkers, International and National Keynotes

CSR Round Table Discussions and Pecha Kucha

More Details Soon

18th June Social Media

We will be working with Fairsnape to run a Twitter and linkedIN workshop in Old Broadcasting House, Leeds Metropolitan University. This course will give you a great platform to build your knowledge of social media and integrate it into your company to maximize its potential. Registration details here.

#GVischat CSR Tweetchat 18th June

The social media event will be followed by our next Green Vision tweetchat exploring Construction CSR using #GVisChat

To register interest, please email ckeevents@leedsmet.ac.uk with your name, company and position. To book a place on the series, please visit our Online Store. For any other queries email the CKE team at ckeevents@leedsmet.ac.uk

8:06 am - Posted by admin  | Comments ( 0 )

Over the past few weeks the government’s flagship energy efficiency policy, the Green Deal, has lurched from one setback to the next. On the one side is the Tea Party tendency in the Tory Party – those Tory MPs who don’t believe in climate change, or don’t think it’s worth bothering about. For them, attacking the Green Deal is just another way of undermining efforts to cut our carbon emissions and proves how out of touch they are with families struggling with soaring energy bills.

On the other side are ministers responsible for the Green Deal, who are just as out of touch with ordinary families affected by the cost of living crisis, and don’t seem to understand that unless serious improvements are made to the scheme, the public just won’t want to take it up. They dismiss anyone who wants to improve the Green Deal, to make it a better deal for the public, as talking down the scheme – when in reality, of course, exactly the opposite is true. The real champions of the Green Deal are those of us who are trying to improve it and make it a good deal.

Labour wants the Green Deal to succeed. We had a pay-as-you-save scheme in our manifesto, and it was the last Labour government who initiated pilot programmes to test the scheme. If done properly, a pay-as-you-save energy efficiency scheme could create jobs, lower bills for families and cut carbon emissions.

Instead of trying to force it on to the public, ministers should focus on improving the Green Deal to make it as attractive as possible, delivers savings for hard-pressed bill payers and offers real incentives so millions of people want to take it up.

April 25, 2012 8:49 am - Posted by admin  | Comments ( 0 )