UK

New homes must reduce greenhouse gases by a third

carbon emissions

Housing Minister Eddie Hughes said the regulations were an important step towards 2025’s future homes and building standards where all new homes must be net-zero ready

All new buildings must reduce their greenhouse gases by nearly a third under new building regulations which will come into force in June.

Under the rules, carbon emissions from new build homes must be 30% lower than current standards and other new buildings such as offices and shops must be 27% lower.

Housing Minister Eddie Hughes said the regulations were an important step towards 2025’s future homes and building standards where all new homes must be net-zero ready.

The changes will significantly improve the energy efficiency of the buildings where we live, work and spend our free time and are an important step on our country’s journey towards a cleaner, greener built environment, he said.

This means installing solar panels and heat pumps and improving insulation will be critical for achieving the new tougher requirements.

New homes, care homes, student accommodation and children’s homes, must be designed to reduce overheating. Improvements to ventilation will be introduced to support residents’ safety in newly-built homes and to prevent airborne viruses from spreading in new non-residential buildings.

The National Federation of Builders (NFB) said it supported higher standards but warned against changing the rules every few years.

NFB head of housing and planning policy Rico Wotulewicz said: We’re encouraging our members to go higher than this interim standard as the 2025 future homes standard will move the goalposts again.

The trade body is critical of new part S regulation leaving developers to pay for offsite grid work infrastructure so that new homes have electric vehicle chargers.

The Royal Institution of British Architects said the new rules had not gone far enough and should have included energy use regulation to force the built environment to decarbonise at the required rate.

But brokers, Hank Zarihs Associates, have commented that development finance lenders were keen to give construction loans to SME developers embracing innovation to make their buildings net-zero ready.

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