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Carbon Emissions Reduction Target (CERT)

Carbon Emissions Reduction Target (CERT). Paul Egerton Energy Efficiency & Households. 4 September 2009. Carbon Emissions Reduction Target (CERT). Key CERT Changes Increased target by 20% to 185 million tonnes of lifetime carbon.

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Carbon Emissions Reduction Target (CERT)

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  1. Carbon Emissions Reduction Target (CERT) Paul Egerton Energy Efficiency & Households 4 September 2009

  2. Carbon Emissions Reduction Target (CERT) Key CERT Changes • Increased target by 20% to 185 million tonnes of lifetime carbon. • Permitted Real Time Displays (RTDs) and Home Energy Advice as allowable actions. • Increased the Market Transformation ring-fence to a maximum of 10% of a suppliers’ overall obligation (12% with addition of microgeneration). • Have removed direct mail CFLs wef Jan 2010. • Moved towards voluntary reporting of measures.

  3. Key Differences from April Consultation • Have dropped the proposed uplifts for professional loft top-ups and DIY loft insulation. • Have decided to remove direct mail CFLs as an eligible measure wef Jan 2010 in response to stakeholders concerns. • Introduced a cap on behavioural measures.

  4. Will the removal of the uplifts to insulation measures result in fewer measures? • Suppliers in their consultation response universally said that the scores proposed were insufficient to cause them to change their plans. This was supported by strong stakeholder opposition to the uplift from those that would benefit most. • No evidence that uplift has caused any additional measures to be installed. • Score would need to be uplifted by 200-300% for loft top-ups; this is an unacceptable carbon loss.

  5. Suppliers will just turn to soft measures to meet their obligation • We have made it more difficult to deliver “soft” measures: • Direct mail CFLs banned from 1 January 2010. • Cap placed at 2% of a suppliers target that can be met from Real Time Displays and Home Energy Surveys.

  6. Adding behavioural measures to CERT will lead to a loss of carbon. • The consultation was fairly evenly split between those in favour and those against behavioural measures. • Government position is that behavioural measures offer significant potential to make savings and therefore on balance, they should be tested. • Government acknowledges the strong concerns that suppliers might use behavioural measures to the exclusion of hard measures so it has introduced a cap and set this at 2% of a supplier’s target.

  7. What will Home Energy Advice cover? • Ofgem are setting broad standards which they expect advice provision to cover and will expect suppliers to demonstrate that these issues have been covered. • Issues we would like to see covered includes:- G:\CERT+20%\Consultation\Home Energy Advice.xlsx

  8. Where are we going forward? CERT 2 and beyond. • Have decided to extend CERT for a 21 month period until 31 December 2012 to align domestic carbon emissions with the carbon budget process. • Will consult on “CERT 2” during this autumn. • Have yet to fully develop our thinking, • Likely to be pro-rata, the same level of ambition as the current CERT – somewhere around 121 MtC. • initial thoughts are that there will be increased focus on insulation. • More focussed support to vulnerable households. • Look to give early certainty. • Important not to unduly increase the administrative burden of obligation. • Aiming to publish the Government Home Energy Saving Strategy by end 2009.

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