Easy-fit letter box draught excluder

Author: heather (Page 3 of 6)

Minimum Energy Performance Standard

What is the Minimum Energy Performance Standard (MEPS)?

Minimum Energy Performance Standard – not only a mouthful but set to be a headache too. MEPS is the aspect of the 2011 Energy Act intended to improve the energy efficiency of buildings in the private rented sector, both residential and non-residential. The minimum standard proposed is band E, as assessed by the Energy Performance Certificate of the property. The act set a deadline of April 2018 for these improvements to be made in England and Wales for new rental agreements, and suddenly that’s right around the corner. At the moment the regulations don’t apply to existing tenancies.

Reaching the Minimum Energy Performance Standard

minimum energy performance standard

Hereford Archives, a passivhaus non-residential building

There are a variety of ways depending on the state of the building and the stage of the building. Retrofit and best practice in maintenance will make a difference, as will a fabric first or even Passivhaus approach to new build. It’s very easy to focus on new build at the expense of retrofit, especially as the standard of new housing in the UK is woeful and it’s simpler to set out a clear standard for new builds, which can factor them in to financial and logistical planning, than it is for retrofit of existing housing stock of massively varying size, age, design and quality.

According to an article from IRT, 3 ways to maximise your portfolio energy performance (now no longer online), in London the new legislation will affect one in three buildings. The article goes on to reveal that most buildings do not, in practice, go on to perform as well as they should on paper, to some extent making a mockery of legislation:

Change of usage, extensions, refurbishments, dilapidations, cowboy buildings, adhoc maintenance, all contribute to a portfolio dataset that is far from perfect. Add in trying to meet legislative compliance on a shoestring budget and the whole thing goes pear-shaped very quickly.

Enforcing MEPS

Interestingly, the IRT article points out that banks can review commercial mortgages every two years, and they would be within their rights to pull the plug on arrangements covering a building that didn’t meet regulations or did so only on paper and could be proven not to meet the standards in reality. We’ve read in several articles that the legislation will be so overwhelming that it’s unlikely to be enforced to the letter and could become in effect voluntary unless strict adherence becomes unavoidable.

Ultimately this is likely to become a very sore point between potential tenants and landlords of existing low energy efficiency stock. Already it can feel that the landlords hold all the cards (if you’ve had any involvement with young adult offspring trying to rent a flat it’s definitely a landlord’s – and an agent’s – market: expensive, demoralising and undermining) and low enforcement risks amplifying that effect hugely as substandard privately-rented property becomes the preserve of those on the lowest incomes, while landlords can charge a premium for freshly retrofitted, MEPS-meeting properties.

Ethical landlords with a genuine interest in running their buildings to optimum energy efficiency may find they already meet MEPS, or can do with relatively minor improvements, and benefit alongside their tenants from a well-maintained portfolio and a happy and healthy tenant-landlord relationship. This a goal for everyone in the sector to aim for.

Monitoring energy is not saving energy

Monitoring energy vs taking real steps

This section has focussed before on monitoring energy and the distinction between knowing (or thinking you know) how much energy you’re using, and taking real, measurable steps to reduce that energy consumption in a range of ways, eg thermostat control, insulation, lowere energy appliances and domestic habits. This article from last Saturday’s Guardian and the letter it generated in response make this point perfectly.

From the article:

studies show they cut energy consumption by 3% or less

From the letter:

This device provides us with a conversation piece and not much else.

Very little change in habits

The article covers all sorts of reasons why smart meters are not nearly as smart as the energy companies and the government would like to think – not least because later models render earlier obsolete, you may be faced with having to start all over again if you switch energy companies and the cost of installation vastly outweighs the cost savings – but mainly because consumers with these meters installed are showing very little change in habits.

Monitoring energy is potentially an extremely useful element in managing the home energy economy. No-one is suggesting we blunder around in ignorance of the costs of our energy or the power required by our various appliances. The problem is that from the consumer’s perspective, installation of a smart meter is interesting and diverting in the short term, strokes the part of the brain that allows people to feel they’re ‘doing their bit’ and being energy aware, but in reality does nothing more than simply monitoring energy which in itself does nothing to to reduce consumptiom.

Old-fashioned energy saving

monitoring energy

This door has a letter box draught excluder and a draughtbusting curtain

Energy companies may well be better off giving their customers old-fashioned energy saving measures such as curtains over the door, letter box and pet door draught excluders, sausages along the bottom of the door and foil behind the radiator.

Some of those measures will be harder to quantify than others, but no-one can argue that they’re effective and less prone to malfunction.

So far, smart meters have done more for the energy companies than the consumer, bringing down meter reading costs and billing errors, all costly issues for the energy companies to deal with. Energy monitoring and energy saving are two different and distinct things, and shouldn’t be conflated.

 

Draughtproof pet door: The Petflap

Draughtproof pet door

We’ve been asked more times than we can remember whether we do a draughtproof pet door, and we always had to answer ‘not yet’, but now the people who brought you the Ecoflap letter box draught excluder have developed the draught-resistant, rattle-free Petflap pet door. Read more on our Petflap site.

Using the same design principles as the Ecoflap, using any airflow to sit more tightly shut aganst its frame rather than flapping and blowing in the breeze, the Petway is an attractive animal-friendly design that will contribute to your home’s energy economy and comfort.

Simple to fit, easy to clean

Small and quiet enough not to intimidate a kitten, big enough for a terrier, the Petflap is set to be a tremendously popular addition to the homes of the UK’s pet lovers. Affordable, simple to fit (view fitting instructions here) and easy to clean, the Petflap addresses the concerns of most cat- and dog-loving homeowners, but there’s no reason why your house rabbit, rat, chinchilla or micro-pig can’t be trained to use it. We have the facility too to create bespoke size and material pet doors, so please get in touch if your needs are less mainstream than the standard Petflap.

Like an Ecoflap but your pet goes through it, not your post

The Petflap will retail for £69 (inc VAT and delivery) and is delivered next day if you order before 3pm Monday-Friday. Orders placed over the weekend are despatched on Monday for delivery on Tuesday. As always we’ll be on hand to answer questions and advise on any fitting queries. It’s very much like buying an Ecoflap, only your pet goes through it, not your post.

Here’s a first look at the Petflap, the British-designed, UK-made revolutionary pet door. Please note it does have a lock, though this isn’t present in the photographs.

If you haven’t yet bought an Ecoflap, why not buy the two together and draughtproof your home for the winter? And if you really want to treat your front door, fit a draughtproof stainless steel Letterplate, also available through our shop, made in the UK and guaranteed for 10 years.

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Retrofit for energy efficiency success

What makes a successful energy efficiency retrofit?

Badly designed energy efficiency retrofit can cause more problems than it solves

Badly designed energy efficiency retrofit can cause more problems than it solves

Short-term thinking: a retrofit disaster

I read an article on the Sustainable Homes website today that brought to mind a conversation with an ex-colleague, the property manager at a historic house in the south east of England. Her point was that ever since the sash windows had been sealed in their offices, the windows ran with damp and surely this couldn’t be a good thing. She’s absolutely right and the cause is as described in the article on the blog:

The tendency…to focus on the immediate and short term, with the consequent potential for a poorly designed and risk-controlled project, has long been a concern.

ECO funding

This article was looking at the implementation of ECO and specifically its focus on the short-term fix and goes on to look at organisations that have preferred to run projects without this type of funding, eg Viridian Housing, in order to retain more control.The blog post is a response to an article from Inside Housing (you need to regsiter to read articles) questioning whether energy efficiency work was in fact causing rather than solving problems for social housing tenants, but as the SH blog comments:

poor design, planning, procurement and delivery will create significant problems, and that’s the case for any work irrespective of why you wish to carry it out.

Active management

It’s vital particularly in this context to distinguish cause from effect. The author of the blog post, Tony Jarman of Your Homes Newcastle, points out the dangers of box-ticking to qualify for funding in an areas that “has to be actively managed”. He outlines the areas of skill and expertise that are required and the planning and monitoring pre- and post-retrofit that must be carried out. Otherwise, as he says, energy efficiency could become “the villain of the piece” and that would serve no-one.

Going back to that conversation I had, it’s all about “active management” of ventilation. Draughty sashes aren’t comfortable, but properly maintained and used as originally intended sash windows provide excellent draught-free ventilation. Sealing them up and bringing ventilation to an abrupt stop allows damp to build up. Apart from being uncomfortable to work in, damp is very dangerous for any building and will lead to a host of problems. Draughtproofing yes, lack of controlled ventilation no.

Older, not colder: warmer homes for older people

Older, not colder

older, not colder

Older, not colder: warmer houses have multiple benefits for the older population. The UK’s housing stock is among the hardest and most expensive to heat in Europe.

Older, not colder: we were struck today by a report released by AgeUK looking at the effects of being cold on our older population. Specifically, it focussed on hard to heat houses and the costs associated with that.

Wide ranging report

The report ranges widely to cover health issues and excess deaths, managing and understanding bills and different energy delivery systems, the different challenges posed by different housing types and proposes a solution: an ambitious government-funded reftrofit programme to bring housing up to the required standard.

The report’s point can be summed up by these two paragraphs:

The rising costs of energy and the difficulties of having a hard-to-heat
home mean that many older people on low incomes fear not being able
to pay their energy bills and are being forced to ration their heating, during
even the coldest weather.

Many older people who are faced with the stark choice between heating
or eating end up rationing both with disastrous effects on their physical
and mental health and wellbeing.

Benefits of energy efficiency programme

The benefits of bring up to standard our most inefficient housing (that in bands D to G) would be manifold. Housing brought up to spec would stay that way, gas supplies would be brought permanently to areas currently without that option, claner and renewable fuels could be used more widely, and that’s before the cost benefits to the NHS.

Powerful reports

Including facts and figures, infographics and upsetting case studies, the report packs a punch. Read in conjunction with the NEA’s report on the shocking daily cost of needless cold-related illness, we hope those in a position to make the appropriate financial contribution will pay attention and take action.

Download the PDF here.

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