Tuesday 15 October 2013

Full Council Notice of Motion | Energy Bill Revolution

My speech to Full Council on my Notice of Motion on  a way forward in tackling the crisis of fuel poverty:


We are facing an energy bill crisis, with millions of people nationwide struggling to heat their homes.

It is estimated that 5,957 families in Exeter are currently in fuel poverty

What does that mean?

It means that nearly 6000 households in Exeter need to spend more than 10% of their income on keeping their homes warm.

And the problem is likely to get worse,
with 1 in 3 households projected to be in fuel poverty by 2016 compared with 1 in 5 now.

There are 2 main reasons for this crisis

Gas, oil and coal prices are high,

And the UK’s homes are some of the most energy inefficient in Europe – leaking heat from their doors, walls and windows.

This means they cost much more than they should to heat and power, and that contributes to climate change too.

Cold homes are damaging the health of vulnerable members of society, including children, older people and people with disabilities.

Diseases such as asthma are made worse, and people are more likely to have strokes and heart attacks.

Illnesses caused by cold homes cost the NHS nearly one billion pounds each year.

But there is a fair and permanent solution to this crisis

We can have warm homes, reduce our fuel bills and cut carbon emissions.

The answer is for the Government to use the money it gets from carbon taxes to help make homes super-energy efficient – with excellent insulation, renewable energy and modern boilers.

Even though these things save money on energy bills and keep our homes warmer, many people simply can’t afford to pay for them – meaning they stay cold.

That’s why the Government must provide more funding to help.

The funding is there – from carbon taxes used to help combat climate change

What about the current funding of the failing Green Deal scheme?

That Green Deal that will spark an energy efficiency and home improvement revolution

A Freedom of Information request in August this year revealed that some £20 million has been spent on administering the Green Deal

That’s in addition to some £244 million set aside in loans to pay for measures such as a new boiler, loft insulation or solar panels

Yet figures published by the Department of Energy and Climate Change show despite 38,256 assessments having been conducted, but as last week 961 of these had been signed by the customer.
All this hot air (no pun intended) and only 961 sign up?
That means probably 3 households in Exeter have signed up.
Nearly 6000 families face fuel poverty in Exeter and only 3 households sign up to a deal that will spark an energy efficiency and home improvement revolution

The figure falls farcically short of the target ministers had set of 10,000 by the end of the year.

At current rates, it could take 160 years for all of the UK's housing to benefit.
Companies who were taking on staff to cope with the demand are now laying them off.
The fact that over 95% of people who had a Green Deal assessment didn’t want to take out a package should be a wake-up call for the government
So wakey wakey – Mchael Fallon, George Osborn and David Cameron
Over the next 15 years the Government will raise an average of £4 billion every year in carbon taxes.

If the Government recycled this carbon revenue back to households, it could provide billions of pounds to help insulate the UK’s homes. The benefits would be immense.

This could bring 9 out of 10 homes out of fuel poverty, lower people’s bills, cut carbon emissions AND create jobs.

It’s time for an Energy Bill Revolution.

This money could be used to help all households or just to support the most vulnerable.

There is, for example, enough carbon tax revenue to treat 600,000 fuel poor households every year, providing each of them with a grant worth on average £6,500 to install energy efficiency measures. This would reduce their energy bills by an average £310 a year.

Recycling carbon revenue to make homes super-energy efficient could bring 9 out of 10 homes out of fuel poverty. It could also be used to quadruple savings in carbon emissions compared to the Government’s new energy efficiency schemes and create up to 200,000 jobs – exactly what we need to support the UK’s economic recovery.

I’d like Exeter City Council to join The Energy Bill Revolution  - a movement of people committed to ensuring warm homes and lower bills for all.

It is a public alliance, made up of over 150 major organisations
children’s and older people’s charities,
environmental groups,
health and disability groups,
trade unions,
consumer groups,
businesses, politicians and public figures.

The Liberal Democats agreed to back the campaign when they voted through the “Green Growth, Green Jobs” policy paper at their conference on Sunday 15th September.

A commitment to use carbon revenue to insulate fuel poor homes has  become official liberal democrat party policy.

At the Labour conference, the party announced that they would scrap the Green Deal and Energy Company Obligation and replace them with more effective policies.


But nothing on this matter at the Conservative Party Conference – and I should know.

At times during the conference, I was rated by MHP Communications as in top 10 of #Tory social media influencers/

Even the Big 6 Energy companies have signed up,

Yes those baddies who complain about Ed Miliband’s pseudo-Marxist plans to freeze energy prices after the General Election because it will put them out of business

Those self-same Big 6 Energy companies, each of who already offer at least 1 tariff that is frozen to 2015 or beyond.

Frozen prices can help them earn business now, but not in 2015.

Thatcher privatized the energy market to increase competition – now Cameron complains there isn’t enough competition.

But its not competition we need now to solve the crisis of fuel poverty

It’s co-operation

I hope you will all support this resolution


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