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Residential Property Surveyors Association 23 April 2013 Stephen Penlington Department of Energy and Climate Change. What is the Green Deal?.
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Residential Property Surveyors Association 23 April 2013 Stephen Penlington Department of Energy and Climate Change
What is the Green Deal? • The Green Deal helps people pay for energy efficiency improvements like insulation and new boilers, through a daily charge on their electricity bills. • The provision of Green Deal finance is predicated on the principle that the instalments payable under a Green Deal Plan should not exceed the expected resulting savings.
What’s eligible? Creating energy Loft insulation Windows Draught proofing Solid wall insulation External doors Cavity wall insulation Heating • 45 different improvements can be paid for in part or full • Covers both residential and non-residential buildings
What can the Green Deal pay for? Cavity wall insulation Cylinder thermostats Draught proofing Solid wall insulation Condensing boilers Heat pumps Heating controls Lighting systems Biomass boilers Cylinder thermostats Draught proofing Duct insulation Hot water showers/systems/taps • Fan-assisted replacement storage heaters • Flue gas heat recovery devices • Heating, ventilation and air-conditioning controls • Replacement and secondary glazing • Under-floor heating • High performance external doors • Hot water controls • Lighting systems, fittings and controls • Mechanical ventilation with heat recovery • Pipe-work insulation • Microgeneration • Chillers • Condensing boilers • Replacement glazing • Roof insulation • Sealing improvements • Under-floor heating • Under-floor insulation • Variable speed drives for fans and pumps If it’s on this list, you could pay for it in whole or in part using Green Deal finance
How does it work? Assessor gives impartial recommendations on what customers need • Provider arranges quotes to customer, provides finance and arranges for installation • Installer installs improvements Customer enjoys benefits and pays provider over time through savings
The Green Deal Charge What is the Green Deal charge? • A new type of loan repayment (Green Deal is an unsecured loan regulated under the Consumer Credit Act) • A daily charge added to the electricity bill of a property, collected by the electricity company and passed onto the Green Deal Provider • Green Deal instalments can only be paid by the “bill payer for the time being” as the person benefitting from the energy savings while they occupy the property – key concept that allows Plan charge to pass between bill payers • What the Green Deal Charge is not • It is not a charge against the property – specifically prohibited by the legislation - and the Land Register has no role in the Green Deal
The Green Deal Charge • New electricity bill payers will not be liable for any arrears in payment left by the previous bill payer – Green Deal instalments are treated the same way as any other energy debt • Where a property repossessed mortgagee in possession likely to be responsible for electricity bill and therefore the Green Deal Plan payments – as person with right to pass on title • Where the property is “de-energised” (i.e. temporarily disconnected) the Green Deal daily charge will continue to be added to the bill and will still be payable
Consents and Confirmations Consent to the improvements installed Green Deal customer must: • gain consent from all relevant parties as set out in their lease, tenancy or license agreement. • Secure relevant consents from the Local Authority for planning and Building Control (competent persons schemes for Building Regulations will authorise installers under the Green Deal) • provide confirmation that they have gained all these necessary consents • supply the Provider with written documentation from all relevant bodies confirming consents have been given. Before a Green Deal is entered into, relevant consents are required • Consent to the charge to be added to the electricity bill, from • the bill payer, regardless of who is the Green Deal customer • The landlord or freeholder, as they become liable for the electricity bill (void periods) • Provider must attach written consent documents as an annex to the Green Deal Plan – people moving into Green Deal properties should check these are in place
Disclosure and Acknowledgement the Energy Act 2011 and framework regulations require owners to 2. Secure the acknowledgment of the buyer or tenant that they will be bound by the Plan 1. Disclose key terms of the Green Deal Plan to a prospective buyer or tenant meeting existing requirements to provide an EPC full EPC to be included with all written information at the “earliest opportunity” – supports disclosure Green Deal Providers required to update the EPC In any document that effects a property transfer wording in the regulations: • Liable to pay the green deal plan instalments; and • Bound by the terms of the green deal plan which bind a bill payer
The Green Deal banner on the EPC Look for the EPC - banner text at bottom of first page will indicate presence of a Green Deal (details on new 5th page) England & Wales A Green Deal has paid to install energy efficiency improvements at this property. A daily Green Deal charge is payable via the electricity bill. Important details about the Green Deal on this property, including the amount of the charge, can be found in the “Information about the Green Deal” section at the end of this EPC. Scotland A Green Deal has funded energy efficiency improvements at this property and a daily charge is payable via the electricity bill. Please refer to the attached Recommendations Report for details.
The Role of the EPC The EPC will include: • details of the Green Deal Provider • key terms of the Plan Each EPC has a unique Report Reference Number (RRN) which can be used to access the up to date EPC free of charge at www.epcregister.com. RRN is only way to access the EPC where a Green Deal is present on the property
Conclusion • The Green Deal has been designed as a tool to enable carbon reduction from the building stock, and to balance the need to create a viable market, with the need to protect consumers and provide confidence • It will build on existing property industry regulation and practice e.g. use of the EPC • The Guidance can be found at https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/the-green-deal-guidance-for-the-property-industry-in-great-britain Any Questions?