New Recruits

October 19, 2010

Islay Energy Trust has recruited 5 Home Energy Assessors to help in the delivery of the Scottish Government’s Home Insulation Scheme in the Argyll islands. Between the end of October and late December, the Islay-based team – Alec Chasemore, Meri Ferguson and Rosie MacLellan from Islay, Lindsay Smith from Jura and Joe Teale from Gigha – will visit every home on Islay, Jura and Gigha offering a free Home Energy Check. This will identify individual insulation needs and any offers for which householders may be eligible. The Assessors, who are about to finish a three-week training programme and will be trained to City & Guilds level, will make three attempts at visiting every home.  The HEC can also be filled in online or over the phone. When all the survey work is complete, the appointed installer – still to be announced – will be contracted to complete the insulation work within a very strict time frame. If you haven’t yet had loft or cavity wall insulation installed, this will be an opportunity to take advantage of heavily discounted rates, or in many cases free installation. In particular, if you currently have between 60 and 160mm of insulation on your loft, you will be offered a free top-up, irrespective of your circumstances or the size of your loft. This is a new, very valuable benefit which has not previously been offered.

The Islay-based team will be seconded to Changeworks, the managing organisation for the HIS, and will work alongside teams based on Mull and Bute to cover every island in Argyll.

“The Islay Energy Trust (IET) moved quickly to assist Changeworks in the recruitment process. Working with locally based staff offers so many advantages in terms of service delivery that the partnership made good operational sense. Building up further expertise for the benefit of the community also fits well with Changeworks’ strategy of support for island and rural based communities on behalf of its Energy Saving Scotland advice centres”, comments Tom Kenny, Head of Commercial Operations at Changeworks, who has been tasked with co-ordinating assessments to over 90,000 properties across Scotland.

 Information from the HEC forms will also be used to build up a clearer picture of housing across the islands, for example identifying the proportion of ‘hard-to-treat’ houses such as those with solid walls or coombed ceilings. It is hoped that feeding this information back to the Scottish Government may help to make a case for subsidised measures to treat these, so your participation is vital. Even if you have completed a HEC form in the past, it’s important that you take a few minutes with one of the Assessors to complete a new one.

This is a great opportunity for the islands, and IET are delighted to have played a part in ensuring that some of the associated employment comes to Islay. We wish all the new recruits the best of luck with their training, and look forward to seeing them in their new HIS uniforms very soon!


Spring may be coming…..but….

March 25, 2010

                                                       

Don’t forget how cold the winter was! If you were shivering in an uninsulated house this winter, make sure you do something about it before the summer passes. Without insulation, you were losing up to 25% of your home’s heat through the roof, and another 30% through cavity walls – and paying for the pleasure.

Energycare Scotland have just completed a second round of work on the island as part of Islay Energy Trust’s Carbon Savings project, and this time over 20 homes have benefited from either free or cut-price loft and cavity wall insulation.  These boys are keen to work and will be back on Islay during the last week of April, so get in touch now if you’d like to participate.  Anyone missed from this latest list due to timing or other issues will be top of the next. Other firms carry out this work too – you may have had a flyer from Argyll & Bute Council with your council tax bill recently offering a council tax rebate if you take up an offer from Scottish Gas; feel free to explore this but it’s worth noting that the ‘rebate’ appears to have been added on to the initial cost, which on this visit by Energycare was around £199. It has also proved difficult to get larger firms to commit to coming to the islands

These discounts for insulation work apply to all households with uninsulated cavity walls and also those with less than 60mm of loft insulation; if you are over 70 or on certain benefits the work may be free. The benefits of full insulation are immediate and will save you money as well as keeping your house warmer – even if you have to pay for cavity wall insulation, it will repay itself in just 2-3 years. If you are having trouble keeping your house warm, insulation is the first thing you should consider – there’s no point paying for heat that is escaping to the outdoors!

Interested? The initial survey is free and carries no obligation to have work carried out. If you’re not sure how much loft insulation you already have and have difficulty in accessing your loft yourself, just get in touch – call Lindy on 01496 301413, or email lindy.maclellan@islayenergytrust.org.uk, or call into the IET office in Main Street, Bowmore.  Surveys will take place from 23rd-25th April, with installation completed the following week. Act now and you’ll be sure of warmer winters for the future – indoors at least!

Quick, professional work - and no need to don the face mask yourself!


Carbon Offsetting – Fact or Fiction?

September 15, 2009

holiday-planeHave you booked a flight abroad recently? (And no, that’s not a trick question to see if you’ll own up to having a huge carbon footprint!)  If you have, you may have been offered the chance to tick a box to pay an extra few pounds towards ‘carbon offsetting’. The idea behind this is that the airline then invests that money in a scheme which will lead directly to a reduction in greenhouse gases, equal to your share of emissions from the flight. Typically this will be a scheme such as planting trees in a developing country, or supporting the development of renewable technologies -but where does the money really go, and do these schemes ever work?

The biggest criticism of carbon offsetting would appear to be that it encourages the idea of ‘paying to pollute’ rather than changing behaviour. It’s not just flights; you can offset your household energy use, your car travel, your business activities – buyers of Calor Gas patio heaters can even pay to offset the impact of their heater on the environment.  It would appear that the conscience of the developing world can easily be salved, despite the fact that there is no real regulation to ensure that schemes actually exist, that the measured carbon savings are accurate, or that the offset has not already been sold to another customer.

Many of the schemes advertised do not stand much scrutiny – tree planting is a favourite, but while some appear to be well thought out and carefully monitored, such as that of RippleAfrica, in Malawi, others have led to disruption of communities and loss of water supplies through inappropriate land use. In some cases poor management means that the trees do not even survive to maturity – in 2002, Coldplay offset the environmental impact of their latest CD by planting 10,000 mango trees in southern India. Just seven years later, most are already dead.

There have also been claims that some schemes are inadvertently leading to an increase in child labour. In one scheme – ironically, recommended by ‘Which’ as a good buy – farmers in developing countries are being paid to abandon their polluting diesel -powered irrigation pumps and use human-powered treadle pumps instead. Is it right that the world’s poorest should work harder so that the world’s richest can pollute more?

If you do want to offset, look very carefully at the scheme on offer. Does the organisation make it clear how much of your money goes into administration and profit? The UK offsetting industry was worth £60 million in 2006 and is forecast to reach £250 million by the end of this year, but there is no clear indication of how much has reached the projects being promoted, and no accurate measure of the actual carbon savings. If the scheme is one which you feel worthy of support, then it may be that making a direct donation to its organising body is a more efficient way of doing that.

Government organisation DEFRA has set up a Quality Assurance scheme for offsetting projects, to try to reassure consumers – most of the schemes involve development of renewable energy projects and none involve tree planting. DEFRA stresses that offsetting is a measure to be taken ‘after avoiding and reducing emissions as much as possible’- in other words, forget the patio heater, put on a jumper.

If you would like any more information on carbon offsetting, fuel bills or any other energy related matter, or if you’d like to borrow one of our electricity monitors, feel free to call in to the Islay Energy Trust office in Main Street, Bowmore, or contact Lindy on lindy.maclellan@islayenergytrust.org.uk , tel. 301413. If you have a monitor which is due for return, please drop it into the office or call and we can arrange to pick it up. We also have a large stock of low energy light bulbs available free at various points around the island – if you don’t spot any locally, there are lots in the office!


Carbon Saving Project launched

April 30, 2009

This project is funded by the Scottish Government's Climate Challenge Fund.

Islay Energy Trust, backed by the Climate Challenge Fund, has launched a new energy-saving project for Islay and Colonsay. Project Officer Lindy MacLellan, who took up the post on 1st April, will be working with the two island communities to raise awareness of climate change and to encourage energy saving initiatives. One of the first priorities will be to encourage the uptake of grants and discount offers for home insulation – poorly insulated homes being a major source of energy loss. The project has set a target of reducing carbon emissions in the islands by 300 tonnes over each of the 2 years it will run; equivalent to the saving from properly insulating just 100 lofts.