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Opinion

Labour has committed to a warm homes breakthrough – but we’re not out of the cold yet

The government will honour the £13.2bn manifesto commitment to upgrade millions of cold and damp homes. They must ignore Reform UK’s calls to water down net-zero commitments and crack on with reducing energy bills, writes End Fuel Poverty Coalition’s Simon Francis

After years of campaigning and decades of neglect, the news that the government will honour its £13.2 billion manifesto commitment to upgrade millions of cold, damp homes is a watershed moment for how we deal with high energy bills.

The warm homes plan investment will boost insulation and energy efficiency for people suffering in poor housing. It comes on top of recent announcements that every new home will benefit from inbuilt renewable energy generation via the future homes standard and millions of pensioners will have their winter fuel payments restored.

It is also welcome that the chancellor has put the household support fund on a multi-year settlement, reflecting the importance of the emergency help councils provide to people in need.

This is a win for the public, a win for public health, and a win for the environment. 

But let’s be clear – it’s not the end of the crisis. Energy bills are still too high, hundreds of pounds a year more than in 2020.

Despite a modest fall coming in the price cap from 1 July, households remain burdened by an energy market that is reliant on the volatile cost of fossil fuels and is riddled with unfairness. And while funding to insulate five million homes is welcome, it will take time to deliver.

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That’s why the government must now go further. Ministers need to back up today’s warm homes plan with bold action to reform the broken energy pricing system and ensure that those still trapped in fuel poverty are not left behind.

Until our housing stock is improved, people need immediate help with their energy costs. 

The government must act to support all homes in fuel poverty through a social tariff – a targeted, affordable energy price for those on the lowest incomes or with the highest needs, such as those with disabilities, pre-existing health conditions or young children.

Beyond that, the structure of the energy market itself is overdue for reform. That means implementing a proper plan for electricity pricing reform; scrapping marginal pricing so that the last drop of expensive gas no longer sets the cost for the whole market.

We also need to see reform of standing charges – a measure backed by all main parties ahead of the last election.

Fixing the market is not just about affordability, it’s about fairness and public trust. Without it, today’s warm homes plan investment will be undermined by persistent injustice in how energy is priced and delivered.

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And, of course, there are other threats to progress. With Reform threatening to scrap net-zero funding entirely, there will be political voices arguing for the government to water down or walk away from green investment. That would be a mistake – morally, economically, and electorally.

Poll after poll shows that voters want warmer homes, cleaner air, secure energy, and well-paid green jobs. Far from being a drag on the economy, investment in insulation, renewables and clean heating creates thousands of skilled jobs and keeps more money in local communities. It’s not just good climate policy, it’s good economic strategy.

What today’s announcement has created is political space, backed by a public mandate, to go big on green energy and energy efficiency. With luck this will help to ensure that policy makers do not cave into climate denial and short-termism.

As the chancellor herself said, there is no national security without energy security. And there is no energy security without warm, efficient homes. 

Given the well-established health impacts of living in cold damp homes, we now need today’s funding to be delivered with urgency and transparency, starting with those in deepest fuel poverty.

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To be effective, the funding must also be clearly allocated across key programmes, such as the Social Housing Decarbonisation Fund, the Boiler Upgrade Scheme, Home Upgrade Loans and Warm Homes Local Grant schemes and cash for low-carbon heat networks. 

Crucially, this £13.2bn must be additional to, not a rebranding of, existing ECO and GBIS funding pots, which should continue as standalone schemes.

After four winters of record-high energy bills, today’s announcement offers real hope. But to truly end fuel poverty, we need more than one-off pledges. We need permanent reform. 

With this £13.2bn commitment, the government has finally opened the door to fix Britain’s broken energy system. It must now – briskly – walk all the way through it.

Simon Francis is a coordinator at the End Fuel Poverty Coalition.

Promises are easy to break. Sign Big Issue’s petition for a Poverty Zero law and help us make tackling poverty a legal requirement, not just a policy priority.

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