
Key information
Publication type: General
Publication date:
Contents
The Mayor of London has an ambitious target to make London a zero carbon city by 2030. One of the ways to meet this goal is to decarbonise all of London’s 3.5 million homes by upgrading and retrofitting – improving existing homes for high energy efficiency.
The London Assembly Housing Committee has investigated the operational, financial and physical challenges of retrofitting in London. The Committee has also investigated the energy efficiency initiatives already established by the Mayor.
The Committee has written letters to the Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, and the Secretary of State, The Rt Hon Michael Gove MP, with its recommendations on retrofitting homes in London.
Some of the recommendations are:
- The Government should ensure London should get a fair share of all retrofit funding or sufficient powers to raise finance itself, and that the Mayor should lobby for this.
- The Government should raise the landlord cost cap to £10,000 to increase the extent of works private sector landlords are undertaking to meet mandatory minimum energy efficiency standards.
- The Government should ensure that cladding remediation does not negatively impact on retrofitting work and could potentially enable both areas of work to be carried out at the same time.
- The Mayor should bring together private sector landlords and tenants to look at barriers to retrofit and the ways in which government or local government action could overcome them.
Related documents
Letter to the Mayor - retrofitting London's housing
Letter to the Secretary of State - retrofitting London's housing
Response from the Mayor - retrofitting London's housing
Response from MHCLG - retrofitting London's housing