With almost seven out of 10 UK bosses responding to the slowing economy by
seeking to trim costs, energy efficiency has emerged as on of the top cost
saving priorities within many organisations.
That is the finding of a major survey of more than 850 senior executives
carried out by the Carbon
Trust, which found that energy efficiency measures are being widely
preferred to redundancies, and recruitment and salary freezes as the best means
of initially lowering overheads.
The survey revealed that nearly a third of respondents were encouraging staff
to reduce energy waste and over a quarter were prioritising more general energy
efficiency measures. In contrast, 17 per cent rated redundancies as the favoured
cost cutting options, while just 24 per cent identified salary freezes or below
inflation pay rises as their preferred option.
"Our research shows that energy efficiency measures, not job cuts or salary
freezes, are the cost-cutting steps businesses are considering first during this
economically challenging time," said Hugh Jones, solutions director at the
Carbon Trust. "It's an encouraging sign that wise companies are realising that
cutting carbon and being green is the easiest way to make a business lean."
Neil Bentley, director of business environment at the
CBI,
welcomed the research as further evidence that despite the "choppy economic
outlook" climate change and energy efficiency remain high on the corporate
agenda. "The analysis confirms the compelling business case for urgent action to
improve energy efficiency and common-sense measures like turning off lights and
turning the heating down can lead to substantial reductions in firms' energy
bills," he said.
The report also provided evidence that embracing energy saving measures, such
as improved insulation, PC turn off campaigns and more efficient heating and
cooling equipment, can deliver financial savings on a similar scale to those
that can be achieved through job cuts. It calculated that UK plc could save
nearly £2.5bn over the next year simply by implementing cost effective energy
efficiency measures, cutting companies energy bills by an average of 13 per
cent. The report argued that the savings were equivalent to the combined
salaries of 100,000 employees on an average wage.
David Boomer, head of energy efficiency and climate change at the
Institute
of Directors (IoD), said that the findings echoed the employers group's own
findings. "The IoD's research shows that those businesses currently addressing
energy efficiency have reduced their bills by between six and 10 per cent, with
savings of up to 20 per cent being achievable," he observed.
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