BSEE - Building Services and Environmental Engineer
RSS
  • Click here to visit the ABB website
Robust enforcement will be key
Published:  27 June, 2011

HVCA is backing the call for wider use of display energy certificates (DECs), but warns that the scheme is bound to fail unless enforcement is also stepped up. A report from the UK Green Building Council (UKGBC) entitled Carbon Reductions in Existing Non-Domestic Buildings, set out the case for extending the reach of DECs as the most practical way of highlighting potential energy and cost savings in commercial buildings.

Mandatory scheme

The UKGBC wants DECs to be made mandatory for all non-domestic building occupiers – with a phased roll-out starting next year. It is also proposing a mandatory DEC scheme for multi-let buildings over 1,000sq m, with landlords required to provide their tenants with energy data.

Up until now, DECs have only been mandatory for public buildings, so an extension into the private sector would represent an ambitious shift in Government policy. However, HVCA is convinced that a robust compliance regime will be required if the new provisions are to have maximum effect.

“DECs are recognised as a useful and meaningful way of identifying the actual energy performance of buildings,” commented HVCA President Martin Burton.

“However, the current completion rate is only around 30%. If we are now looking to extend this to all commercial buildings, there needs to be a serious increase in enforcement at local authority level.”

Skills shortage

There is also a major shortage of suitably qualified energy assessors, even for the current scheme, according to the President.

“It is essential that, in attempting to widen this pool of experts, we don’t dilute the quality of the assessments that underpin DECs, or of the energy information given to building users,” Mr Burton concluded.

The report calls for a ‘soft start’ to the introduction of non-domestic DECs to ease the administrative burden, and for a more automated approach to producing the certificates in order to contain costs. It is anticipated that the new wider scheme would begin during 2012, with building owners displaying their certificates from 2013.

The UKGBC believes that the proposed changes would be deliverable under the Energy Bill, which is currently passing through Parliament.







© Copyright 2012 Building Services & Environmental Engineer. Datateam Business Media Limited. All rights reserved.
Registered in England No: 1771113. VAT No: 834 8567 90.
Registered Office: 8-10 Dryden Street, Covent Garden, London WC2E 9NA
Webmaster