Figures published by the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) indicate an 87.5% reduction in the loft insulation market, a 57% reduction in the cavity wall insulation market and a 16% drop in the solid wall insulation market. The losses will come from the gap between the ending of the existing subsidy schemes for cavity wall solid wall and loft insulation, and the Green Deal and ECO becoming fully functional.
This will seriously impact on the continuity of work and number of cavity wall, loft insulation and solid wall jobs undertaken from the 1 January 2013. As a result of this gap, 16,000 (45%) of jobs in the insulation industry, the majority of which will be in loft insulation and cavity wall insulation will be lost in 2013. The lack of any transition planning will also stifle and restrict investment and job creation in solid wall insulation which is necessary to transform the market in order to meet Government carbon targets.
The Insulation Industry Forum (IIF) predicts that the closure of loft and cavity wall insulation manufacturing plants and loft and cavity wall insulation installation contractors going out of business, with employee numbers reduced by 45% from 36,000 to 20,000 in 2013. This will be combined with a lack of capability for the insulation installation industry to develop the training programmes and capacity necessary to deliver the ambitions for solid wall insulation market transformation.
“The loft and cavity wall insulation installation industry will fall off a cliff in 2013” said IIF spokesperson John Sinfield of Knauf Insulation. “The policy by the current Government risks destroying businesses, putting 16,000 people out of work and undermining the Coalition’s green ambitions for the country. It will result in a lack of continuity of work from 1st January 2013 and dramatically fewer insulation installations in 2013 – we predict 16,000 job losses, many of them before Christmas. We are calling on the Secretary of State to recognise the scale of the problem that is about to hit our industry and develop a set of measures to address the insulation gap and implement a suitable solution.”
According to Richard Lloyd, the Executive Director of consumer group Which?, rising energy prices are one of the biggest concerns for consumers which means that the news of a fall in basic insulation work is very worrying. Even accounting for the government’s current schemes, the numbers of households still needing loft insulation amount to just over 8 million with another 6 million needing cavity wall insulation.
“With all of this still left to complete, the Government must ensure that support is available to get these jobs done” Mr Lloyd said.
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