UK Green 好色先生TV Council denounces proposal to weaken display energy certificate rules

Green for Growth

The UK Green 好色先生TV Council has attacked a government proposal to weaken the requirement to show display energy certificates (DECs) in public buildings.

The Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG) has launched a four week consultation into options to potentially water down the application of the EU Energy Performance of 好色先生TVs Directive (EPBD).

Currently the UK government goes beyond the minimum requirements of the EU EPBD by requiring all public buildings to display DECs, irrespective of whether or not they are 鈥榝requently visited by the public鈥, which is the exact wording of the EU regulations.

DCLG鈥檚 consultation paper proposes changing its application of the 鈥榝requently visited by the public鈥 requirement to mean only those buildings that people use daily 鈥渇or purposes unrelated to their residence, employment, education or training鈥.

It said, for example, this would mean schools would be exempt from needing certificates - since only their pupils and staff ordinarily visited them, while hospitals would require them as there would be continuous public use.

The move is part of a drive by government to rein in on so-called 鈥榞old plating鈥 of EU rules in the UK, whereby the UK goes beyond the strict requirements of EU regulations.

UKGBC acting chief executive John Alker said: 鈥淎ny suggestion of scrapping DECs for public buildings simply beggars belief.

鈥淕overnment time and again trots out the mantra of not 鈥榞old-plating鈥 EU requirements to minimise administrative costs, but completely misses the potential benefits that going further offers.

鈥淩ather than rowing back on DECs, government needs to ensure they are better enforced, with a view to extending them beyond public buildings.鈥

The consultation document admitted that the Department of Energy and Climate Change鈥檚 research suggested that for organisations not normally engaged in energy management, the requirement for DECs 鈥渃an lead to a better understanding of energy usage and can indicate buildings in a portfolio that are particularly energy efficient, or inefficient鈥.

DECs are required to be valid for a year in buildings with a usable floor area in excess of 1,000m2, or for 10 years for those between 500m2 and 1,000m2.