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Fuel Poverty The problem and its measurement Interim Report of the Fuel Poverty Review John Hills.

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Presentation on theme: "Fuel Poverty The problem and its measurement Interim Report of the Fuel Poverty Review John Hills."— Presentation transcript:

1 Fuel Poverty The problem and its measurement Interim Report of the Fuel Poverty Review John Hills

2 Approaching the Terms of Reference Derek Lickorish Chairman, Fuel Poverty Advisory Group SLIDE 2 Welcome Professor John Hills Independent Review of Fuel Poverty

3 Interim report 1. Whether fuel poverty is a distinct problem 2. If so, how fuel poverty is best measured and does the current approach to measurement capture problems effectively? Final report 3. Implications of measurement for the way we understand the effectiveness of the range of policy approaches to reducing it Approaching the Terms of Reference SLIDE 3

4 Causes of fuel poverty SLIDE 4 Causes - Fuel poverty is caused by a lack of control of energy bills or inability to convert cash into heat - Dwelling size and SAP rating have greatest impact on the size of the energy bill - Those on low incomes are least likely to be on the best tariffs, e.g. not on direct debit - Government policies have different effects on different households The net effect on different income groups depends on the how the interventions financed by those policies are distributed

5 SLIDE 5 Impacts of fuel poverty Impacts - There is strong evidence relating to specific health impacts e.g. cardiovascular and respiratory problems below certain temperature thresholds, especially for the elderly - A conservative estimate of the number of excess winter deaths caused by fuel poverty is 1 in 10 or 2,700 – more than the number of road deaths last year - There is an association between cold homes and other social problems such as isolation in adults and poor educational attainment in adolescents - Those who are fuel poor but not living in cold homes do so at the expense of other essential and non essential goods e.g. heat or eat

6 SLIDE 6 - Unequal ability to convert cash to warmth - Pushed into poverty by high costs - Poor pay more Poverty -High rate of EWDs and morbidity issues in general - Mental health and social well-being - Social isolation Health -Capital investments out of reach for some - Potential obstacle to carbon mitigation policy delivery, especially where costs go on bills Carbon / Energy Perspectives on fuel poverty

7 SLIDE 7PERSPECTIVES ON FUEL POVERTY Warm Homes and Energy Conservation Act 2000 “A person is to be regarded as living “in fuel poverty” if he is a member of a household living on a lower income in a home which cannot be kept warm at reasonable cost.” Warm Homes and Energy Conservation Act 2000 “A person is to be regarded as living “in fuel poverty” if he or she is a member of a household living on a lower income in a home which cannot be kept warm at reasonable cost.” Is this what we currently measure?

8 What a good indicator can do - Monitor trends and underlying changes - Indicate extent, depth (and possibly persistence) - Identify the kinds of people affected - Support policy design and assessment Steps 1 to 4 courtesy of Prof C Liddell (NI Review 2011) Why measurement matters SLIDE 8

9 Current definition A fuel poor household is one that would need to spend more than 10% of its income on adequate warmth. SLIDE 9 The current indicator

10 SLIDE 10THE CURRENT INDICATOR Strengths Needs-basedSensitive to three key drivers - Modelled assessment- Income - Doesn’t count being cold as success- Energy efficiency - Prices Weaknesses Fixed thresholdOver-sensitive - No clear rationale- Is unduly dominated by prices - No longer current- Technical issues also have big - Shows tail of distribution impact (e.g. reporting of low incomes and temperature Ratio standards) -Numerator / denominator problem Unreliable - Misreports trends - Distorts policy choices

11 SLIDE 11 Options for measurement Modelling For each option we have modelled how many households would have been captured by each definition from 1996 to 2009 (not all years). We have also modelled household and regional composition for 2004 and 2009. Minor adjustmentsFundamental changes AAfter housing costsDAfter fuel costs poverty BTwice median spendingELow income – low SAP CFuel poverty gapFSubjective

12 SLIDE 12OPTIONS FOR MEASUREMENT Option A – After housing costs - Involves measuring income AHC and adjusting threshold (13.6%) - A very common demand in the evidence gathering exercise - Gives a better account of affordability - Shifts composition by type and region

13 SLIDE 13OPTIONS FOR MEASUREMENT Option B – Twice median spending - Involves adjusting threshold each year, tracking median expenditure - Therefore a relative measure, in spirit of original - Can be done Before Housing Costs (as here) or After Housing Costs

14 Option C – Fuel poverty gap - Involves measuring the ‘distance’ of fuel poor households from the threshold - Gives a sense of the depth of the problem (how badly affected households are), alongside the extent (how many households are affected) - But calculating this distance could compound some of the weaknesses of the current indicator, effectively double-counting the effect of price changes SLIDE 14OPTIONS FOR MEASUREMENT Number of households (millions) Fuel poverty gap (£ billion)

15 SLIDE 15OPTIONS FOR MEASUREMENT Option D – After fuel costs poverty - Takes the DWP 60% median AHC income poverty line and adjusts it for fuel spending (based on modelled need) - Some households become fuel poor who were not income poor (e.g. B) - Some income poor households do not become fuel poor (e.g. A) See Figure 6.3 in report. After fuel costs poverty

16 Option E – Low income – low SAP - Borrow from WHECA: overlap of low income and low SAP (i.e. poor energy efficiency) - Paints a stable picture, but does not respond to prices or reflect modelled need patterns SLIDE 16OPTIONS FOR MEASUREMENT See Figure 6.5 in report.

17 Option F – Subjective measurement - Has the advantage of measuring how people feel, but... - Individual perceptions may differ from society more generally. - Elderly people often don’t self report problems. - Specific phrasing of a question may alter the response. SLIDE 17OPTIONS FOR MEASUREMENT See Section 6.6 in report

18 SLIDE 18OPTIONS FOR MEASUREMENT Overview of Options A to E

19 SLIDE 19OPTIONS FOR MEASUREMENT Insights AAfter housing costsDAfter fuel costs poverty - Better reflects affordability- Reflects those pushed into poverty by high costs BTwice median spendingELow income – low SAP - Relative to contemporary- Captures some of the spending, not fixed overlap within WHECA CFuel poverty gapFSubjective - Additionally measures depth- Useful cross-check of problem Is it possible to bring these insights together?

20 G Low income and high costs indicator SLIDE 20 Low income high costs, including a fuel poverty gap Our analysis suggests we want something that is focused on needs, that measures income after housing costs, that reflects the relative nature of costs, that focuses on the overlap set out in WHECA and that measures the depth of the problem. The basic definition Under this indicator, a fuel poor household is one that : - faces higher than typical costs; and - were it to spend that amount, would fall below the poverty line

21 SLIDE 21LOW INCOME AND HIGH COSTS INDICATOR The broad concept See Figure 7.1 in report

22 See Figures 7.2 and 7.3 in report SLIDE 22LOW INCOME AND HIGH COSTS INDICATOR The more detailed concept Fuel poverty gap We are consulting on how to set the thresholds.

23 Fuel poor under current definition Not fuel poor under current definition 2004 prices SLIDE 23 LOW INCOME AND HIGH COSTS INDICATOR Relationship between the Low income – high costs indicator and the current definition Low costs – high income boundary Median income

24 Fuel poor under current definition Not fuel poor under current definition 2004 prices + 75% ≈ 2009 SLIDE 24 LOW INCOME AND HIGH COSTS INDICATOR Relationship between the Low income – high costs indicator and the current definition Low costs – high income boundary Median income

25 Fuel poor under current definition Not fuel poor under current definition 2004 prices + 150% SLIDE 25 LOW INCOME AND HIGH COSTS INDICATOR Relationship between the Low income – high costs indicator and the current definition Low costs – high income boundary Median income

26 SLIDE 26 LOW INCOME AND HIGH COSTS INDICATOR Number of fuel poor households and aggregate gap Number of households (millions) Fuel poverty gap (£ billion)

27 Conclusion and consultation SLIDE 27 Conclusion - Fuel poverty is a serious problem with serious impacts - Measuring it is important to understand the scale of the problem and to help shape policies to address it - WHECA was right: the core problem is the overlap between income and costs - A Low income – high costs indicator reflects this, with the addition of a fuel poverty gap which in turn reflects the Energy Act 2010

28 SLIDE 28CONCLUSION AND CONSULTATION Questions for consultation - Do you agree with the conclusion that the problem of fuel poverty is, as set out in WHECA, centred around the combination of low incomes and required energy costs above reasonable levels? - Does Chapter 3 set out a comprehensive analysis of health and well being impacts associated with fuel poverty? Is there further compelling evidence relating to those impacts discussed or others that the review would benefit from considering? - Do you agree with our analysis of the strengths and weaknesses of the current fuel poverty indicator, as set out in Chapter 5, and of modifications and alternatives to it in Chapter 6? - Do you agree with our analysis of the strengths and weaknesses of the approach based on a Low Income-High Costs indicator and fuel poverty gap, as set out in Chapter 7? - Do you have any views on the thresholds the review has used for the preferred indicator, as set out in Chapter 7 (and discussed further in Annex B)?

29 The full report is available at: www.decc.gov.uk/hillsfuelpovertyreview


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