The Construction Products Association and the Home Builders Federation (HBF) have teamed up to work out how the construction industry can deliver the government鈥檚 zero carbon targets for new build homes. A first draft of the plan will be issued this month.
Zero carbon means all new build homes need to generate as much, or more, energy as they use. It will equate to a code level six (see box) in the new Code for Sustainable Homes which will come into force in June this year.
Last month, Housing Minister Yvette Cooper called for a 鈥漴evolution鈥 in the way new homes are built. She told delegates at a HBF summit: 鈥淲e need new partnerships between housebuilders, utility companies and local councils to deliver local and renewable energy and we need to develop the environmental technologies of the future.鈥
The Construction Product Association鈥檚 industry affairs director, John Tebbit, believes that delivery of zero carbon homes by 2016 is entirely possible, but requires a detailed roadmap so the industry implements best practice. 鈥淭here are so many issues not yet on the critical path,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 easy enough to deliver a one-off example of a zero carbon home but making it work for the hundreds of thousands that will be required each year is an entirely different matter.鈥
Tebbit added. 鈥淲e need to build a number of high code houses now so that we can see what technology is needed, whether that technology actually works in practice, and see if we鈥檝e got the design and construction approach right.鈥
But Tebbit warned that CPA鈥檚 roadmap will not be definitive. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a plan, not the plan.
If someone comes to us and says they can deliver aspects more quickly than we鈥檝e said, then we鈥檇 be happy for them to show how it can be done.鈥
Code for Sustainable Homes
The Code for Sustainable Homes will rate new homes from one to six stars. A one-star home will use 10% less energy than a house built to the current Part L regulations and a six-star home will be a zero carbon one.
The assessment method, which is being finalised and is due out in April, will be based on BRE鈥檚 EcoHomes system.
Houses will be checked during design and samples of
as-built homes will also be tested before a certificate is issued to the developer.
The code is voluntary, although it will be used as EcoHomes is in the public sector and the government says it is considering making it mandatory in the future.
Source
Construction Manager
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