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Zero-Carbon UK Houses 1/8th Dearer to Build - Report
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UK: May 3, 2007


LONDON - It costs an extra 21 pounds (US$42) per square foot, or 12.5 percent, to build a UK house which meets zero-carbon standards and there are still insufficient incentives to meet the added cost, a study showed on Wednesday.


The report by Nick Jopling, managing director of property services firm CBRE Hamptons International, said market forces were not yet in a position to help reduce the carbon emissions associated with property to meet climate change goals.

According to the Stern Review, which was commissioned by the British government last year, property contributes around half of all man-made greenhouse gas production.

Jopling said the mass adoption of green designs and construction, though possible, was not yet viable.

"There remains the question of how and when we will reach the tipping point of development to the standard of zero-carbon homes at a mass scale," he said.

CBRE Hamptons International, a unit of CB Richard Ellis, assumed the cost of building a 650 square feet apartment in Britain was 105,700 pounds.

To make it a zero-carbon development it then incorporated some green features into the original design -- including a combined heat and power system, sky garden, natural ventilation and lighting, and energy-efficient appliances -- and calculated the total extra cost at 13,400 pounds.

At that level, the UK government's decision to exempt zero-carbon property purchases from stamp duty made the adoption of green design and construction technology by developers and consumers only feasible in affluent areas, CBRE said.


REUTERS NEWS SERVICE

Reuters



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