In 2007, the UK Government announced an ambitious zero-carbon target for all new housing in England. This paper shows how the definition and its associated policies emerged from discourses of environmental policy innovation; how the problem subsequently became framed as one of mainstreaming, consequent upon the apparent success of experimental schemes and defined in more detail through the interaction between pressure group politics and the technical analyses that accompanied the government's consultation exercises. Finally, it shows how regional and local variations in housing and property markets are likely to influence the ease of zero carbon development. The analysis uses concepts drawn from both the science and technology literature an...
In the UK and internationally, a plethora of voluntary and mandatory energy efficiency standards for...
The take-up of the many voluntary energy efficiency standards which exist in the UK and internationa...
With the UK committed to reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 80%, and British households accounting...
In this paper we examine the failure of the zero carbon homes agenda in the UK and argue that it rep...
Housing represents a critical sector globally in the drive to reduce carbon emissions with many coun...
The UK’s existing housing stock is in urgent need of improvement in order for the country to meet cl...
We reflect on the decision to abandon the mainstreaming of zero-carbon house building in England, in...
We consider in this paper the relations between built form and everyday practices of home-living. Th...
In the UK, residential housing represents a significant target sector for carbon emission reductions...
A rapid transition to ‘zero carbon’ building was announced by the UK Government in December 2006 as ...
Housebuilders in England have been the target of numerous government policies in recent years promot...
A rapid transition to ‘zero carbon’ building was announced by the UK Government in December 2006 as ...
he housing sector entails a significant part of the UK’s environmental impact, accounting for over a...
The UK Government is committed to all new homes being zero-carbon from 2016. The use of low and zero...
In the UK and internationally, a plethora of voluntary and mandatory energy efficiency standards for...
The take-up of the many voluntary energy efficiency standards which exist in the UK and internationa...
With the UK committed to reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 80%, and British households accounting...
In this paper we examine the failure of the zero carbon homes agenda in the UK and argue that it rep...
Housing represents a critical sector globally in the drive to reduce carbon emissions with many coun...
The UK’s existing housing stock is in urgent need of improvement in order for the country to meet cl...
We reflect on the decision to abandon the mainstreaming of zero-carbon house building in England, in...
We consider in this paper the relations between built form and everyday practices of home-living. Th...
In the UK, residential housing represents a significant target sector for carbon emission reductions...
A rapid transition to ‘zero carbon’ building was announced by the UK Government in December 2006 as ...
Housebuilders in England have been the target of numerous government policies in recent years promot...
A rapid transition to ‘zero carbon’ building was announced by the UK Government in December 2006 as ...
he housing sector entails a significant part of the UK’s environmental impact, accounting for over a...
The UK Government is committed to all new homes being zero-carbon from 2016. The use of low and zero...
In the UK and internationally, a plethora of voluntary and mandatory energy efficiency standards for...
The take-up of the many voluntary energy efficiency standards which exist in the UK and internationa...
With the UK committed to reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 80%, and British households accounting...