21,000 warmer state homes

by frog

Housing New Zealand owns and maintains about 68,600 houses throughout New Zealand.  Many of these properties were built before 1978, prior to insulation becoming mandatory. Many of these homes have poor or no insulation and inefficient heating such as open fires.

Housing New Zealand has been running a programme to progressively retrofit uninsulated state homes with energy efficient material since 2001. So far it has done this to about 16,500 homes. This has meant ceiling and underfloor insulation, ground moisture barriers, cylinder wraps and lagging on some hot water pipes, draft stop seals to doors and windows, installation of water efficient shower heads, energy efficient light bulbs and energy efficiency heaters.

Jeanette has just won a budget bid to fast track this project with $53.4 million. This will help retrofit a further 21,000 state homes in the next five years. This is double the current rate of progress.

In a win-win outcome, tenants will benefit both from electricity savings and improved health:

“The Greens see this as an investment in the future health of New Zealanders. We estimate that the country will recover this investment four-fold in 20 years in energy and health savings.

“Research indicates that insulated homes use on average a fifth less energy than uninsulated homes.  People report health improvements, including half the number of respiratory symptoms. Children in insulated houses had half the number of days off school.”

frog says

Published in Environment & Resource Management | Health & Wellbeing by frog on Thu, May 15th, 2008   

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