Cost-effective energy efficient technologies remain under-utilised by home
owners due to a number of financial barriers, according to a study by the
International Energy Association (IEA), published today.
The report,
Promoting Energy
Efficiency Investment: Case Studies in the Residential Sector, said
that existing buildings account for over 40 per cent of the world's primary
energy consumption as well as nearly a quarter of global CO2 emissions, making
them a key battleground in the fight to reduce emissions.
IEA director Nobuo Tanaka said that high energy prices and soaring CO2
emissions, meant the "imperative [on the building industry] to improve energy
efficiency is stronger than ever".
However, the report found that despite the existence of many technologies
with the potential to slash domestic energy use and carbon emissions, their
adoption faces a number of major barriers, including the low priority ascribed
to energy saving by consumers, difficulty in accessing capital to make
improvements, and split incentives between landlords who have to invest in
efficiency measures and tenants who will benefit from them.
The IEA claims that to overcome these barriers a series of new policy
measures and incentive schemes need to be adopted to help overcome the high
initial costs of energy efficient equipment.
UK Green Building Council
spokesman John Alker agreed there should be more fiscal incentives for
homeowners to refit their homes, arguing that "Council Tax or Stamp duty
rebates, together with more innovative products from mortgage lenders", could
have a major impact on adoption rates.
In addition to incentives for homeowners, the report claimed that greater
private sector involvement in the sector will be required and government will
need to act to incentivise more firms to address the opportunity presented by
the need to retrofit many homes with energy saving technologies.
Richard Bradley, head of the energy efficiency and environment division at
the IEA, said that new standardised measurement and verification protocols are
required for assessing the effectiveness of energy efficiency investments. He
explained that the development of such protocols would make the evaluation of
green home investments much easier for the banks and mortgage providers that
will be called upon to provide much of the funding.
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