Energy efficient housing scheme rolled out across Stockton
An energy efficient housing scheme which created 500 jobs in Stockton has been rolled out across the rest of the region in a UK first.
The GoWarm project brought lower energy bills to 1,700 homes across Stockon-upon-Tees and Thornaby.
The programme, run by Community Interest Company Energy Solutions and Stockton Borough Council helped households improve energy efficiency and reduce their fuel bills by up to £750 a year.
Now, after Stockton Council signed an agreement to continue its partnership with CES until 2015, the scheme is being extended to cover the entire borough.
The remaining 5000 privately-owned solid wall homes in the region will be offered external wall insulation, free of charge and many will qualify for new boilers and central heating.
This latest development means Stockton is the first council in the UK to run a borough-wide ECO scheme.
And the GoWarm project has become the largest scheme of its kind to be carried out in the UK.
It will sustain the jobs of 500 people who have been working on the GoWarm scheme since it launched in 2012.
It will also help create a new range of apprenticeship opportunities for Stockton Riverside College and GoWarm’s appointed installers - Dalmid, Synergize, AH Property, Castle and Edendene.
Councillor David Rose, Cabinet Member for the Environment, said: “We can now look forward to transforming thousands more people’s homes – making them warmer, better insulated and cheaper to heat – and regenerating streets.
“Even in tough times, councils can take innovative and ambitious steps to help the people we serve.
“Extending this work across the borough and targeting thousands of privately owned homes shows we are committed to doing things differently to make a real difference.
“The hugely successful relationship we have forged with CES will continue to deliver transformational change.”
The first stage of the scheme, which was completed earlier this year, was funded by North Yorkshire-based Eggborough Power Ltd and focussed on properties in Stockton’s Parkfield, Newtown and Mill Lane wards, as well as the Mandale and Victoria areas of Thornaby.
This latest phase, which is expected to be completed by the end of 2015, will cover the rest of the borough and receive ECO funding from leading integrated power and gas company E.ON.
Combined, these works are expected to cut the borough’s carbon emissions by more than 300,000 tonnes per annum and deliver a range of health benefits to those who have previously suffered as a result of living in cold homes.
Karen Hindhaugh, Director of GoWarm, said: “The GoWarm project has more than doubled in size since it was originally launched and it is thanks to the ongoing support of the the local residents, Stockton Council, our funding partners and numerous contractors, that we are able to increase it once again and offer help to more than 5000 additional homes.
“This will not help only help to reduce fuel poverty across the borough but the associated benefits will undoubtedly have a significant impact on the householders and the wider communities as a whole.”
Looking to promote your product/service to SME businesses in your region? Find out how Bdaily can help →
Enjoy the read? Get Bdaily delivered.
Sign up to receive our daily bulletin, sent to your inbox, for free.