As the statutory target
to eliminate fuel poverty in Scotland has come and gone, will a new strategy do
any better?
The Scottish Government
has published a consultation paper on a new fuel poverty strategy for Scotland.
The consultation looks at the existing approach and legislative framework and
sets out proposals for a new Fuel Poverty Strategy in Spring next year. Targets
will be enshrined in a Warm Homes Bill later in 2018.
The number of
households in fuel poverty fell slightly in the latest Scottish House Condition
survey thanks to falling fuel prices. However, still almost one third of homes
suffer under the current definition and the numbers are likely to rise again
with the latest fuel price increases.
There are three main
elements to tackling fuel poverty - the price of fuel, energy efficiency/use
and household income. The first is largely reserved, although energy policy is
a factor. Energy efficiency is devolved and household income has devolved and
reserved elements, including social security.
This means the strategy
rightly has a focus on energy efficiency. Ambitions are fine, but investment is
better. The Scottish Government cut funding to £45m in 2007/08; largely because
they thought the problem had been resolved. It has now recovered to £129m,
although this is well below the £200m Energy Action Scotland warned was needed
to meet the 2016 target.
There are some
particular challenges in Scotland. Not only are we a cold country, but fuel
costs in rural areas are significantly higher. Typically, £2,200 in remote
rural areas, compared to £1,400 in the UK as a whole. There are particular
challenges in island communities. We also have large areas off the gas grid,
which matters for heating.
It is also important
that we retain efficient area based schemes that strengthen communities, rather
than just micro targeting individual households. The proxies used to identify
fuel poor households generally work, but need to be flexibly applied to reflect
local needs.
The consultation paper is
again strong on ambition. Objectives like 'Households are able to enjoy a warm
home' is hard to disagree with. Achieving this apparently requires plenty of
partnership working and linking in to other strategies. While this is probably
true, it does feel rather process driven - hard targets, programmes and
investment are in short supply.
A number of the
organisations currently working in 'partnership' complain about short term
funding. They build up expertise and services and then the funding comes to an
end. Publicity, online and telephone services have their place, but for hard to
reach households it requires an advisor in the household. There has been an
improvement in skilling staff like social workers and community nurses, since
some of the early schemes UNISON did with the Keeping Scotland Warm
partnership. However, we could do more in signposting people towards specialist
advice. Local authority services are under particular pressure due to cuts.
The new statutory target
is to eliminate fuel poverty (new definition) by 2040, with a review at 2030.
There is considerable scepticism of the description of this as 'ambitious',
given the long timescale. We should have learned a thing or two during the past
16 years, to make another 23 year target a bit excessive.
The problem is that
achieving this target depends on a range of variables, particularly fuel prices
and incomes. None of these are likely to be addressed without a serious
political commitment to eliminate poverty more generally.
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