Government鈥檚 construction adviser hits out at carbon reduction plan for lacking concrete actions
The government鈥檚 chief construction advisor Paul Morrell has attacked the government鈥檚 plan for reducing carbon emissions from homes as 鈥渦nder informed by reality鈥.
Morrell told a conference of members of the Aldersgate Group, a membership organisation which focuses on delivering a low carbon economy, that the Carbon Plan, published by the Department for Energy and Climate Change in December last year, was lacking in concrete actions.
He said: 鈥淭he Carbon Plan presumes there鈥檚 a rapid ramp-up in zero carbon homes from 2016, which will not happen for another two years. It鈥檚 all under informed by the reality of the market.鈥
He added that the plan was not something which industry or government could really take action on and characterised it more as a 鈥減lan for a plan鈥 than a plan in itself.
Morrell urged the industry to keep chipping away at government to lead on bringing about changes because he said a breakthrough would eventually come.
The carbon plan sets out 鈥渟teer a course through the uncertainty鈥 of how all sectors of the UK economy will be decarbonised and emissions cut by 80% by 2050. In construction it reiterates the government鈥檚 commitment to the Green Deal and roll-out of increased energy efficiency for the existing stock.
David Adams, director at the Zero Carbon Hub, said: 鈥淎ll building regulations take some time to come into play, so that鈥檚 quite normal. The regulations [on zero carbon homes] come in 2016 but there鈥檚 always a transition period, planning permissions will still be being worked through until 2019 or 2020.鈥
He added that assumptions about uptake of the Green Deal were rather optimistic given the success of Carbon Emissions Reduction Target (CERT) and the Community Energy Saving Programme (CESP) at giving away insulation.
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