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David George Housing Intelligence for the East Midlands (hi4em) December 2011. Fuel Poverty costs. How does fuel poverty impact on society? Slows infant development – impact for life Children and teenagers more likely to suffer: Meningitis and respiratory problems
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David GeorgeHousing Intelligence for the East Midlands (hi4em)December 2011
Fuel Poverty costs How does fuel poverty impact on society? • Slows infant development – impact for life • Children and teenagers more likely to suffer: • Meningitis and respiratory problems • Long term ill health and disability • Slow physical growth and delayed cognitive development • Vulnerable adults more likely to suffer: • Heart attack, stroke or respiratory illness • Slips, trips and falls • Huge cost to NHS, Education, Social Services, Criminal Justice System – and people’s lives
References: • Harker L (2006) Chance of a lifetime: The impact of housing on children’s lives. London: Shelter. http://england.shelter.org.uk/professional_resources/policy_library/policy_library_folder/chance_of_a_lifetime_-_the_impact_of_bad_housing_on_childrens_lives • Capie R (2009) Beyond built: The role of housing in tackling inequality. CIH presentation to the Marmot Review. http://issuu.com/healthygreenfutures/docs/uk_marmot_review • Review of Health and Safety Risk Drivers’ CLG in 2008: http://www.communities.gov.uk/documents/planningandbuilding/pdf/reviewhealthsafety.pdf
East Midlands Fuel Poverty levels • DECC 2008 LSOA dataset = 359,000 (19.2%) • Based on fuel costs, income and energy needed to heat homes • Hi4em 2011 LSOA dataset = 277,400 (14.1%) • Based on CO2 emissions, household income and fuel costs (Nottingham Energy Partnership web site March 2011) • What is actually spent rather than what is needed
Effect of price rises 15% Price rise: • 75,000 more fuel poor • 26.9% increase • 30%+ in parts of Lincolnshire • Map shows numeric increase Hi4em fuel poverty Model can be updated as prices fluctuate
Green deal – how many homes? • Lofts & cavities 2012-20: • 32,400 tonnes - equal to 381,000 loft top-ups or 81,000 cavity insulations • Major measures – primarily solid wall insulation • 243,000 tonnes – equal to 162,000 dwellings or 30% of all solid walled houses
The task • Will get harder • Fuel market price increases • Cost of carbon reduction policies expected to be £200 per household • Policies expected to have much smaller impact where homes are fully insulated • Message: • Pay to insulate your home, or pay to insulate your neighbour’s home • Challenge: • Match Green Deals to fuel poor households
Fuel Poor households DECC data: 61.4% are single adult households
Fuel Poor households DECC data: 26.8% of single adult households are fuel poor
Fuel Poor households Hi4em data: 71% are single adult households or home sharers
Fuel Poor households Hi4em data: 26.9% are single adult households or home sharers
Targeting • Average area of 3,000 households: • Target 1,000 single person households – data available to LAs through Council Tax single person discount • Reaches 269 in fuel poverty = approx 66% of all fuel poor • Leaves 139 fuel poor families to find
Targeting Families in or at risk of fuel poverty Single person households in or at risk of fuel poverty
Hi4em help • Hi4em model can be split into families and single person households • Your household data can be added to improve accuracy: • Insulation installed • Boilers replaced • CO2 emission estimates • Renewable energy installations • Household income data • Target areas based on most up-to-date data
Hi4em help We can analyse data to give: • dwelling and household characteristics of fuel poor households in your area • loft, cavity and solid wall insulation targets to eliminate fuel poverty and meet carbon reduction targets in any area • Ranking of lower super output areas to your criteria – fuel poverty, dwelling age, vulnerability etc
More information Full report and appendices: • Expands on these themes and gives much more data • Available at www.hi4em.org.uk