Title: Affordable warmth
1Affordable warmth
- Causes and remedies for the private rented sector
2What is affordable warmth?
- The ability to heat your home to an adequate
level for household comfort and health, without
developing debt as a result. - The lack of affordable warmth is known as fuel
poverty. - Households that need to spend 10 or more of
their income for adequate warmth are experiencing
fuel poverty.
3The affordable warmth partnership for
Gloucestershire
- The partnership was launched in 2001, with the
aim that all homes would be warm homes by 2016. - The partnership has forged valuable links to
realise this aim - The revised strategy states that The local
authorities of Gloucestershire and South
Gloucestershire, in partnership with the Severn
Wye Energy Agency, the health, community and
private sectors, will tackle fuel poverty and
provide affordable warmth by 2016
4The size of the problem
- In England as a whole, in September 2008, NEA
estimates that 19 of households were in fuel
poverty. - In September 2008, the number of households in
fuel poverty in the South West was estimated by
NEA as 433,000, or 19.9 of all households.
5 What is affordable warmth?
- Landlords reasonable cost to install and
maintain. - Tenants the cost to keep warm
6Factors affecting affordability
- Type of heating system
- Age and efficiency of boilers
- Existence of controls
- Insulation and ventilation
- Structural integrity of building
- Location and orientation of building
7Intervention
- Grants
- Advice and Information
- Enforcement (by the local authority)
8Warm Front
- Tenant, not landlord, must be eligible
- Insulation measures available
- Provision of heating where none exists
9Gloucestershire Warm and Well
- Tenant, not landlord, must be eligible
- Insulation (loft and cavity)
- Replacement gas boilers
- Full gas heating systems where funding available
- Additional discount for insulation when landlord
applies via Rent Warm, Rent Well
10CERT (Carbon Emissions Reduction Target)
- From fuel suppliers
- Focus is on insulation measures
- NOTE Measures available to all, not exclusive to
the customers of particular fuel suppliers
11Communication is key
- All grants need landlord approval and tenant
co-operation for access - Effective communication between landlord and
tenant is essential
12Grant advice for all grants
- For free and impartial advice on ALL grants, as
well as signposting and referrals, contact the
Energy Savings Trust Advice Centre for the South
West - Ring 0800 512 012
- NOTE ESTAC advisors can advise on local
authority grant variations
13How to spread the word
- During visit
- Website
- Municipal offices
- Health centres
- Targeted mail shots
- Targeted inspections
- Landlord forums
14Decent Homes Standard
- Meets the current statutory minimum standard for
housing Health and Housing Safety Rating System
HHSRS - Is in a reasonable state of repair
- has reasonably modern facilities and services
- provides a reasonable degree of thermal comfort
with efficient heating and insulation.
15Decent Homes
- Target for social housing to meet the standard by
2010 - Gloucestershire LAA target NBE(1)
- Number of private sector dwellings occupied by
vulnerable people made decent
16Enforcement
- In April 2006 the Housing Act 2004 replaced the
old housing fitness standard with the Housing
Health Safety Rating System (HHSRS)
17Potential Hazards
- A - Physiological Requirements
- EXCESS COLD
- B - Psychological Requirements
- C - Protection Against Infection
- D - Protection Against Accidents
18Harm Outcomes
- Class 1
- Death from hypothermia cardiovascular
respiratory illness, regular severe pneumonia. - Class 2
- Cardio-respiratory disease requiring
hospitalisation - Class 3
- Cardio-respiratory disease not requiring
hospital - Class 4
- Regular repeated colds and minor chest
infections
19What is Excess Cold?
- A healthy indoor temperature is around 21oC
- A small risk to health begins below 19oC
- Serious health risks occur below 16oC
- Below 10oC Hypothermia begins.
20HHSRS Hazard Rating
- Calculation gives a rating for each hazard
expressed as a numerical score. - Scores are then banded into 10 bands A to J.
- A to C (gt1000) - Category 1 hazards.
- D to J (lt1000) - Category 2 hazards.
21Excess Cold Hazard
- Average scores
- Pre 1920 1,066 A Cat 1
- 1920-45 1,035 A Cat 1
- 1946-79 880 D Cat 2
- Post 1979 664 D Cat 2
- Average scores for HMOs are higher
22The Ideal for insulation
- Cavity walls should be insulated.
- Post 1930s housing usually has cavity walls.
- Loft insulation ideal is 250-270mm (can be more!)
- Less than 150mm can be topped up.
- Hard to Treat insulation
- Sloping ceilings and solid walls
23The Ideal for heating
- Ideal is whole house fixed heating
- Heating must be controllable and the controls
understandable - Appropriate heating systems
- Storage heaters in well insulated dwellings
- solid fuel unsuitable for older people
- portable heaters are not a heating system
24Alternatives to central heating
- In living rooms and bedrooms, a 3kW (or
equivalent) appliance with thermostatic control
and programmer/timer (on appliance or system) but
must provide adequate heat output - Use following websites to calculate required
heat output- - www.radcals.com www.dimplex.co.uk/products/do
mestic_heating/installed_heating/how_much_heat_do_
I_need.
25Problems
- Landlord reluctance
- Hard to treat properties
- Hard to reach occupiers
26Action Plan for Tenants
- Get advice
- Speak to landlord
- Apply for grants
- If all else fails
- Contact L.A if enforcement action needed.
- (The Housing or Environmental Health department
is usually the best department to speak to)
27Action plan for landlords
- Get advice
- Speak to tenants
- Decide whether tenant or landlord to apply for
grants - Apply for grants
28Questions
- If you would like further information, please
contact - Julie Wight
- Environmental Health Manager
- Gloucester City Council
- 01452 396320
- Julie.wight_at_gloucester.gov.uk