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BUSINESSES NEED CLARITY ON GREEN DEAL FINANCING - CBI

The Government’s Green Deal risks failing to attract the businesses it needs to deliver its flagship energy efficiency scheme unless it provides greater clarity on how it will be financed and promoted, the CBI said today (Tuesday).


The Green Deal will allow people to take out loans to improve the energy efficiency of their properties, including for insulation, heating and lighting. The loans are to be attached to the property and will be paid back over a fixed period through the savings made on energy bills.

However, with a new CBI survey showing that three-quarters of the public do not even consider the energy efficiency of a property when buying or renting a home, the Government clearly needs to do more to get consumers to buy into the concept. This is a vital first step to ensure there is a market for the businesses that will deliver the scheme.

Dr Neil Bentley, CBI Deputy Director-General, said:

“Improving the energy efficiency of our homes and businesses is a surefire way of cutting emissions, as well as creating economic growth.

“The Green Deal is a good idea, but risks becoming a lame duck unless the Government tackles the big questions of financing and uptake.

“The Government faces an uphill challenge convincing home owners to sign up to the Green Deal, given that three-quarters admit they don’t consider energy efficiency when looking at a property.

“To ensure the scheme is a success, the Government needs to clarify how the Green Deal will be paid for in the early stages to give investors confidence, and make it simple and hassle-free for consumers.”

In a new report called A Real Deal? Making the Green Deal Work, the CBI is calling on the Government to deliver:

· A financial model that is attractive to private investors with a decision by Spring on where the default risk will lie, ensuring that it does not undermine the ability of smaller firms to become providers.
· DECC should also provide robust and realistic modelling to show expected payback periods, including for different types of properties
· A range of policies to encourage take-up of the Green Deal by the public, which could include rolling out Display Energy Certificates to commercial properties
· Promoting the Green Deal through targeted communications at appropriate trigger points. For example, when people are buying their first home or installing a new boiler.
· Establishing a strong, recognisable Green Deal kitemark and system of accreditation to generate confidence and trust, both among potential consumers and providers.

A copy of A Real Deal? Making the Green Deal Work is attached.


Notes to Editors:

The CBI is the UK's leading business organisation, speaking for some 240,000 businesses that together employ around a third of the private sector workforce. With offices across the UK as well as representation in Brussels, Washington, Beijing and Delhi the CBI communicates the British business voice around the world.

The CBI commissioned IPSOS Mori to deliver 1,988 quantitative face-to-face interviews conducted as part of an Omnibus survey in September 2010. The data was weighted to be nationally representative. The weighted total is 1,992 interviews.



Attachments:
CBI Green Deal Feb 11.pdf



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