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Manchester’s housing retrofit goals

Lucy Dixon
14.07.2023

Manchester City Council has shared its housing retrofit achievements so far, and ongoing targets.

Social Housing Decarbonisation Fund (SHDF)

£49.7m will be invested in 1,603 council-owned homes to improve sustainability through a range of works, which include better property and roof insulation, solar paneling, new boilers or heating systems, and air and ground heat pumps

This includes £11.6m from the Social Housing Decarbonisation Fund and a £38m contribution from the council’s capital programme. At the same time, part of this funding will be also used to deliver a range of decent homes investments in the same properties, including building safety and fire safety work, to limit disruption to the residents while work is taking place.

Currently, the grant funding is limited to properties rated EPC D or below with the expectation that the measures will improve most properties to EPC C rating, and to EPC B in some cases.

Retrofit surveys to inform the extent of the programme of work are already underway. The whole programme is expected to be completed in September 2025.

There are a further 1,538 social homes owned by the city’s Registered Providers that will be retrofitted through their own SHDF schemes.

Home Upgrade Grant (HUG phase 2) – private properties

This funding will be used to support low-income households in the private sector to improve the energy efficiency of their homes.

£10m from the Home Upgrade Grant fund will be provided to help improve the EPC rating of 500 privately owned homes from D or below to C. The funding targets properties which do not currently use gas as their main heating fuel and those meeting other criteria set by DESNZ.

This programme of work will begin later in 2023 and will be completed by March 2025.

Manchester’s zero carbon story so far

To date, significant progress and investment has been made towards city-wide retrofitting projects.

£83m has been spent on energy efficiency improvements to council properties in north Manchester since 2005 leading to a 49% reduction in CO2 emissions (from 55,000 to 28,000 tonnes of CO2) in the homes that have received investment.

2,100 Residents received energy advice since 2013, saving them an estimated £370k and 500 tonnes of CO2.

Investment in the council’s own stock to date includes: 

  • External insulation to 1,600 solid wall properties and 14 high rise blocks of flats
  • Cavity wall insulation to 5,100 homes and top-up loft insulation to 7,000 homes
  • Installation of 580 heat pumps and 2,350 solar photovoltaic (PV) systems
  • This investment has been supported by £12m contribution in the form of external grants to since 2010.

Cllr Gavin White, Manchester City Council’s executive member for housing and development, said:

Housing is a major source of carbon usage and therefore investing in energy efficiency measures is a key element of our journey to become a zero carbon city by 2038. This £60m represents the biggest investment in low carbon retrofit works in our history and is testament to our commitment to reducing our collective carbon emissions.

The challenge is significant but one we need to tackle head on. We have around 70,000 social rented homes in the city – 16,000 owned by the Council – and we have committed to retrofitting 60% of those that we own by 2032.

We also need residents to come on this journey with us. These works will require us to work directly with Council tenants and private owners – and although inevitably there will be some short term disruption, the end product is warm, healthier, more efficient – and ultimately cheaper to run – homes for our residents.

Cllr Tracey Rawlins, Manchester City Council’s executive member for environment and transport, said:

This is an incredibly ambitious investment by the council helping to retrofit homes in the city that are in the most part dominated by pre-war and mid-century proeprties, many with lower standards of insulation and poor energy performance ratings.

Retrofitting older housing is an emerging field that requires a broad range of works and is currently very expensive. We would urge for more national funding to be made available to support councils to invest in our homes and support our journey to zero carbon.

However, there is also opportunity here. A broad range of skills are required with significant opportunities for work in the coming years to meet the retrofit agenda. In the last year alone, 500 people across Greater Manchester had gained the skills to meet the retrofit challenge and we would encourage people to find out how they can get involved.