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Is there really an air conditioning ban in Britain?

Tory shadow energy secretary Claire Coutinho said that the Tories would overturn “the de-facto ban on air-con” and “Make Britain Cool Again”

There is no air conditioning ban in the UK, experts have told Big Issue – despite Conservative Party claims to the contrary.

Tory shadow energy secretary Claire Coutinho said that the Tories would overturn “the de-facto ban on air-con” and “Make Britain Cool Again.”

“Our building regulations are blocking Brits from enjoying the cool air that you could have had almost anywhere else in the world,” Coutinho declared in a video posted on X. “Why? Because the government thinks it uses too much energy.”

“That’s why only 3% of British homes have aircon, compared to 90% in the US, Japan, and Korea.”

The former net-zero secretary slammed a so-called “miserabilist approach to energy which says we alone can’t have air con or AI.”

But there is no ‘ban on air con’ – and the limitations that do exist were drawn up by the last Conservative government.

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What’s the reality?

“There definitely isn’t an official ban,” says Rosalie Callway, policy manager at Town and Country Planning Association. “What they are talking about is a mixture of building regulations, but there’s nothing that explicitly preventing air conditioning.”

Under current regulations, builders must prioritise “passive” ways of keeping new homes cool – like window coverings and cross-ventilation – before installing active systems. These limiting rules were drawn up under Conservative housing secretary Robert Jenrick, who has since defected to Reform UK.

Where passive measures won’t work, air conditioning can still be installed – and existing homes face no restrictions at all. An estimated four million UK homes now have air conditioning, double the figure from three years ago, The Guardian recently reported.

Passive cooling is also more effective than it sounds. “The Passivhaus standard… it’s like an insulating system,” says Callway. “It keeps a building internally the same sort of temperature all year round. It doesn’t get excessively cold in the winter, but it doesn’t get excessively hot in the summer. That means you just don’t need as much energy either to heat the building or to cool it. People living in those sorts of flats will save money because they’re built more efficiently from the outset.”

External shading alone can reduce heat gain from the sun by up to 92%, according to the University of East London.

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The 3% statistic on how many British homes have air conditioning is accurate, but Coutinho has mischaracterised why it is so low. The reason Britain has historically had so little air conditioning isn’t regulatory, it’s down to a cooler climate. The UK has historically been much cooler than Japan, Korea, or the American south.

That is changing: a total of 92% of existing UK homes are at risk of overheating in 2050, a recent Climate Change Committee report said. Most of the risk of heat-related deaths can be avoided in the 2050s by adapting 30% of the most vulnerable urban households in the next few years.

“There’s a threshold where [passive methods] only do so much,” says Callway. “But the point is to start with… reducing emissions, because that’s what is causing the global heating in the first place.

“If the building isn’t designed in the right way from the outset, it just becomes so much harder to then deal with the consequences of overheating. We need to try and avoid [that] first before we think about then mitigating the overheating that’s happened because we haven’t designed our houses well.”

Air conditioning accounts for around 4% of global emissions. Bob Ward, head of the Grantham Institute for Climate, took to X to criticise Coutinho’s policy on these grounds.

“The Conservatives will not try to stop heatwaves from becoming ever more intense and frequent, but will just encourage everybody to get air conditioning to deal with temperatures as they exceed 40C, 45C, 50C etc,” he said.

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