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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Environment

Local government could also do more to help with the cost of living

Aerial view of modern housing with solar panels in Cambridge, UK.
‘Coordinating solar installations by street could lead to material cost savings, as would simpler permitting rules, and installations on council-owned rooftops.’ Photograph: Justin Paget/Getty Images

Your editorial is right that the government could be doing more to help with the cost of living (The Guardian view on Britain’s coming energy shock: mini-measures won’t suffice, 22 May). That extends to local government, too. Renewable energy projects, from the industrial scale right down to rooftops, can be scuppered locally even if there is national support. The wealthiest borough in the entire country, Kensington and Chelsea, has the nation’s lowest rooftop solar installation rate, at just 0.6% of households according to the MCS installer database. This is despite touting groundbreaking policies to make it easier to build solar in conservation areas.

There are so many local policies that would help. Coordinating solar installations by street could lead to material cost savings, as would simpler permitting rules, and installations on council-owned rooftops. When 80% of cars in the borough are parked on the street, cost-effective public charging is essential to ensure that drivers can make the switch, like offering discounted charging when grid power is cheapest. Partnering with housing associations, charities, and energy suppliers to help people access energy efficiency services and government capital grants, or negotiate payment plans for their bills could go a long way to making people feel more secure.

More fiscal intervention may be necessary at a national level, but local governments could be playing a much bigger role in supporting their constituents on the cost of living. This starts with making it easier to invest in homes and streets.
Cllr Lucy Shaw
Labour and Cooperative party, Kensington and Chelsea council; visiting fellow, Just Transition Finance Lab, London School of Economics

Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.

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