Grant Shapps £1billion scheme will tell households to turn boilers down to 60C
Want to cut your gas and electricity bills this winter? Turn your boiler down to 60C, leave radiators off in empty rooms, and draughtproof windows and doors, Britons will be told as ministers launch £1bn energy efficiency drive
- An £18million public information campaign will give energy-saving advice
- Business Secretary Grant Shapps also plans for a £1billion ‘Eco Plus’ scheme
- This will provide funding for loft insulation and cavity wall insulation to families
Households will be told to turn their boilers down to 60C, leave radiators off in empty rooms and draughtproof windows and doors as ministers launch a £1billion energy efficiency drive.
Business Secretary Grant Shapps is planning an £18million public information campaign to offer advice and technical tips to help households cut their energy use while keeping warm.
It will suggest measures such as reducing the boiler flow temperature from 75C to 60C, turning down radiators in empty rooms and draught proofing windows and doors.
The government is likely to use TV, radio, social media and adverts on public transport to promote its advice, as well as on its Help for Households website.
The two-part strategy will also include a £1billion ‘Eco Plus’ scheme from the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy to help middle-income households make their homes more energy efficient.
Business Secretary Grant Shapps is planning an £18million public information campaign to offer advice and technical tips to help households cut their energy use (pictured on November 1)
The campaign will suggest measures such as reducing the boiler flow temperature from 75C to 60C, turning down radiators in empty rooms and draught proofing windows and doors (file images)
The government is likely to announce plans to fund loft and cavity wall insulation in a bid to reduce the UK’s energy consumption and save families around £310 a year.
Hundreds of thousands of households which have not been eligible for previous schemes will be able to benefit from the new Eco+ scheme, which will run for up to three years from next spring.
Eligible households within council tax bands A through to D could receive assistance to make their homes more energy-efficient through insulation.
Around 80 per cent of available funding will be reserved for households which fall into these council tax bands and for houses that are the least energy efficient.
Loft insulation can save homes around £640 a year, while filling cavities can knock £525 off bills.
Eco schemes have already delivered more than three million energy-efficiency measures in 2.4million homes, the Government estimates.
The Government will also confirm today an £18million public information campaign to offer advice and technical tips to help households cut their energy use while keeping warm (file image)
Ministers hope the funding, allocated from existing budgets, will also provide certainty to green supply chains and jobs in the sector.
Mr Shapps said: ‘The Government put immediate help in place to support households in the wake of global energy price rises caused by Putin’s illegal march on Ukraine.
‘Today, we launch the first of many measures to ensure the British public are never put in this position again as we work towards an energy- independent future.
‘A new Eco scheme will enable thousands more to insulate their homes, protecting the pounds in their pockets, and create jobs across the country.
‘And in the short term, our new public information campaign will also give people the tools they need to reduce their energy use while keeping warm this winter.’
But Labour’s climate change spokesman Ed Miliband said: ‘This reheated announcement with no new resources is far too little too late and will help only a tiny fraction of the millions of people facing a cost of living emergency this winter.’
He added: ‘Labour’s Warm Homes Plan would insulate up to two million homes a year, saving pensioners and families up to £1,000 off their energy bills.’