A Government review is recommending that households should receive a
score based on how energy efficient they are and that homeowners who
refuse to install heat pumps could see their properties fall in value.
According to The Telegraph:
A
“root and branch” review of how Energy Performance Certificates (EPCs)
are calculated will boost the scores of households that use heat pumps,
remote-controlled thermostats and other eco inventions backed by
ministers.
The system, which will be in place by 2025, is
designed to reflect the Government’s commitment to decarbonising homes
as part of its Net Zero drive.
But it may also mean that those
who do not adopt green technology in their homes will receive a lower
score, which can reduce the value of a property or make it more
difficult to rent out.
Landlords have already been told that
properties with a rating of less than “C” will be illegal to lease after
2027, while mortgage lenders have offered preferential rates to those
buying houses rated “A” or “B”.
The latest move to change the
calculations behind EPCs could force homeowners to adopt home energy
alterations, or face a costly downgrade.
The Building Research
Establishment, which is conducting the review, said the new system would
be “better suited to modern and dynamic technologies which will help
decarbonise the UK’s housing stock, such as heat pumps, renewables,
storage technologies and smart control devices”.
It will also be
used in the Future Homes Standard, which mandates that new homes built
from 2025 must have low-carbon heating systems installed.
But
despite a recent VAT cut on heat pumps, solar panels and other home
renovations in Rishi Sunak’s Spring Statement, trade bodies have warned
it is still prohibitively expensive to convert all but the
best-insulated homes.
Air source heat pumps, which produce
energy by extracting air from outside a property and blowing it across
refrigerant liquid, cost £10,855 per property on average, versus £1,400
for a replacement gas boiler.
Households that install the
systems typically pay less in energy bills, but the savings are not
enough to recoup the original cost of installation, according to the
Energy & Utilities Alliance.
Conservative MP Craig Mackinlay
who chair’s the party’s Net Zero Scrutiny Group, told The Telegraph
that this is “statism gone mad.” He went on to say:
“This is
‘nudge factor’ on steroids, towards certain technologies that are
unproven, unpopular and don’t work very well. I would recommend they
leave it alone and wait for technologies that people actually want to
come forward, rather than frightening the mortgage, rental and domestic
property markets, which it looks to me that this is likely to do.”
It
is indeed statism. It’s also social crediting. Your home will be
assigned a score based on how energy efficient it is, but that’s just
for starters. Eventually, you and I will be assigned a score too.
The
late great Jim Marrs told me many years ago, that the introduction of
credit scores – to allow a lender assess the probability that the loanee
would pay them back – was really about programming us to accept the
concept of being scored.
Jim never used the term social
crediting, but he did warn of a day when each of us would be assessed
based on how good a citizen we were.
How I miss him....<<<Richie Allen>>>...
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