Policy Exchange: Clean Growth: How to boost business energy productivity

26 Sep 2017 02:51 PM

The Government should establish a new Energy Efficiency Delivery Unit and Energy Performance Certificates should be linked to business rates to incentivise landlords to invest more in energy efficiency, according to Clean Growth, the new report from Policy Exchange’s influential and expert Energy and Environment team.

The report calls for a new approach by Government to encourage investment in business energy efficiency to reduce carbon emissions and improve business productivity. Existing tools like the Energy Saving Opportunity Scheme can be much better used – and must be extended to public sector institutions like the NHS and MoD.

The report’s key recommendations are:

Joshua Burke, Energy and Environment Research Fellow, who wrote the report, said:

“Improving energy efficiency is amongst the easiest and cheapest ways to decarbonise our energy system. Businesses and public sector organisations spend the equivalent of nearly 5% of GDP (£22bn) on energy every year but too many organisations still aren’t investing enough in energy efficiency. It needs to be seen as a major strategic investment which is both good for the environment and good for profitability.

“Public sector leadership on energy efficiency could save the taxpayer billions, while the private sector should focus on funding energy efficiency projects, particularly those that have longer payback periods.

“What will ultimately drive energy efficiency projects are the perceived strategic and productivity benefits rather than energy and carbon savings, and this is how it should be framed and communicated to ensure traction across all management levels of businesses.”

Bill Rogers, Managing Director, Distributed Energy at Green Investment Group Limited (GIG), which supported the research, said:

“Finance is increasingly working with technical solution providers to help businesses capture the benefits of energy efficiency. Measures that actively engage senior decision makers will be critical in translating this opportunity into much-needed infrastructure investment.”

Nick Park, Group Head of Energy Policy Development at Centrica, which also supported the research, said:

“By gaining a better understanding of their energy use, businesses large and small can save money, improve operational performance and become more resilient. Improving energy efficiency provides a golden opportunity for businesses and the public sector to improve productivity and unlock future growth opportunities.”