Challenge Poverty Week 2022 - more than 1,000 homes in Edinburgh to receive transformational energy efficiency upgrades

The City of Edinburgh Council will improve the energy efficiency of more than 1,000 homes in the coming year, thanks to £5 million of Scottish Government funding.

This new support will help to create warmer, more secure homes for thousands of people in the capital. This funding, which specifically targets areas of fuel poverty, is only for private sector properties although many schemes cover private sector properties in mixed tenure blocks.

The work will build on the successes of previous projects delivered by the City of Edinburgh Council and Changeworks, which have seen 734 homes receive energy upgrades in the last year alone.

The measures offered include external or internal wall insulation, which significantly reduces heat loss from homes, as well as renewable technologies such as solar panels and battery storage. Renewable technologies can reduce energy demand and help to lessen the impact of rising fuel costs on householders.

Making homes cheaper and easier to heat is a key priority presently, as more than 20% of households in Edinburgh are currently in fuel poverty. At the same time, installing energy upgrades will reduce the carbon footprint of homes in the city, as Edinburgh strives to reach net zero carbon by 2030.

The news comes as Challenge Poverty Week 2022 is underway to raise awareness of the injustice of poverty and inequality.

Councillor Jane Meagher, Housing, Homelessness and Fair Work Convener, said:

With our residents facing the biggest cost of living crisis in decades, this is a welcome step which will help many homeowners lower their energy bills. The funding will be used to support people living in private residences to reduce emissions and heat loss from their homes, mirroring much of the work we are doing as a Council to improve the fabric of hundreds of social homes. We all must become less reliant on high carbon fuel and make the transition to being more energy efficient, so that together we can face the climate emergency - and inflation - and become a net zero carbon city by 2030.

Paul Thom, Changeworks’ Technical Director, said:

We’re delighted to be working in partnership with the City of Edinburgh Council to deliver another year of EES:ABS projects. We’ve already achieved great results working together over the past 12 years and relish the opportunity to make many more homes more energy efficient, helping to reduce fuel poverty as a result. These projects are hugely important to the city and play a crucial role in helping Edinburgh reach a net-zero future.

The City of Edinburgh Council and Changeworks have secured £5.1m funding from the Scottish Government’s Energy Efficient Scotland: Area Based Schemes (EES: ABS) to deliver energy efficiency projects across the city. The EES:ABS projects seek to tackle fuel poverty and reduce carbon emissions and heat loss from homes. Changeworks is the largest delivery agent of EES:ABS funding in the country and has a longstanding partnership with the City of Edinburgh Council.

Through these schemes, the City of Edinburgh Council is supporting Edinburgh residents to improve their home’s energy performance at a greatly reduced cost – or, in some cases, for free.

If you would like to find out more about the delivery of energy efficiency projects taking place in the city and how Changeworks can help you, please contact 0131 555 4010 or projectmanagement@changeworks.org.uk.

Published: October 6th 2022