Produced by Manchester-based urban design company URBED , the ‘Retrofit Fact-file’ is a short summary of facts and publications relevant to retrofit – the upgrading of existing homes to new energy efficient standards – released on Tuesday 13th September 2016 to coincide with Community Energy Fortnight.
With ambitious carbon emission reduction targets,  increasing levels of fuel poverty and research showing the links between poor housing and poor health, energy efficient retrofit is increasingly being identified as the best way to tackle these environmental and social issues whilst attracting investment and creating new jobs.

The report draws on real world research collected from the Greater Manchester-based Community Energy organisation Carbon Co-op’s Community Green Deal project. The project saw local owner occupiers benefit from multiple whole house retrofit measures, such as external wall insulation, triple glazed windows and solar panels.

The report indicates that the Carbon Co-op homes each saved an average of £900 per year on their energy bills, cut their gas use by nearly a half and have achieved 2050 carbon emissions targets today.

Jonathan Atkinson of Carbon Co-op said:
“The report outlines the case for doing more on energy efficiency and improving our homes – benefiting not just the environment but our pockets and our health. Since the Government’s Green Deal programme ended in failure it’s up to Community Energy organisations like Carbon Co-op to show the way.”

Professor Kevin Anderson deputy director of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research at Manchester said:

“If the UK is serious about making its fair contribution to meeting the Paris Agreement’s climate goals, it is crucial it begins a programme of rapid retrofit across the UK’s housing stock.

Carbon Coop’s work demonstrates what can be achieved when technical expertise is brought together with an understanding of how householders live within their homes. It is these examples that inform my discussions with local and national policymakers about how retrofit could offer huge benefits to the UK – secure employment, the elimination of fuel poverty, resilience to volatile energy prices and, of course, major reductions in carbon emissions.

Given the appalling thermal condition of much of the UK’s housing stock, retrofit is one of those few cases of a genuine win-win opportunity.”

The fact-file concludes that a renewed commitment to energy efficient retrofit could create 130,00 new jobs in the UK’s construction industry and pump billions of pounds of investment in to the economy

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