The Carbon Trust has
hit back at criticism that it is having a limited impact and not proving cost
effective in the wake of a National Audit
Office report into its progress.
The
report, published last week, found that the Carbon Trust was on track to
meet its target of delivering 4.4m tonnes of carbon savings by 2010 and argued
that it offered "value for money", having helped deliver businesses up to £655m
in cost savings based on investments of less than half that value. It also found
that eight out of 10 organisations that worked with the Trust were happy with
the service they received.
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However, the report also found that only 12 per cent of large businesses with
energy bills over £50,000 a year had worked with the Carbon Trust, and when an
organisation had worked with firms, less than 40 per cent of its recommendations
have been implemented.
The findings prompted criticism that the Carbon Trust was failing to have a
sufficient impact. NAO chief Sir John Bourn praised the organisation's
achievements but warned that its achievements were small "in view of the scale
of the challenge ahead".
Speaking to The Times, Alex Lambie, head of
greenhelpline.com, said that at
an annual cost of £103m, the Carbon Trust's achievements "are worryingly small
and symptomatic of the Government's persistently disjointed and misguided
approach to tackling climate change".
But Harry Morrison, senior strategy manager at the Carbon Trust, said that
the organisation was pleased with the report, adding that while it was committed
to improving further, much of the criticism failed to appreciate the realities
of low-carbon investments.
"We think the fact that 40 per cent of our recommendations are implemented is
a good figure and we wouldn't expect it to be much higher at this stage,"
Morrison said. "There are often barriers to investment, in the form of planning
and supply chain issues, for example, and some of the responses [to the report]
haven’t understood the range of issues businesses have to grapple with."
The NAO report endorsed this view, claiming that the main barriers for firms
implementing the Carbon Trust's recommendations were "competing investment
priorities and difficulties… securing senior management commitment".
Morrison added that the Trust expected the proportion of its recommendations
being implemented would increase over time because a number of its suggestions
to firms are large infrastructure projects that can take up to five years to
authorise and implement.
Morrison also argued that the organisation was developing new services to
help drive up adoption rates further. "One of the main problems is getting
senior management buy-in, so we are investing in raising awareness among that
constituency of the value of low-carbon investments and are making progress
there," he said. "We have also set up systems whereby when one of our
consultants recommends a capital intensive project, we then send in a specialist
in that area who can help put in the right specs and make the business case."
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