Brits plan to spend £13bn on home green improvements

January 17, 2008 by admin  
Filed under News, News-Mortgages

Homeowners in Britain are planning to spend £13 billion on improvements to their properties claims new research.

The findings from the Co-operative Bank have shown that a number of consumers have already begun to instigate general ‘green’ changes.

Up to 66 per cent of people are recycling, 60 per cent have switched to energy saving light bulbs and another 40 per cent have installed loft and cavity wall insulation.

John Barker, head of mortgages at the Co-operative Bank said: “This research clearly shows that people are really starting to sit up and take notice of green issues in relation to their homes.”

“Houses are one of the largest sources of carbon dioxide emissions in the UK and taking steps to improve the environmental impact of homes is something that we strongly believe should be encouraged,” he added.

According to the research the ‘greenest’ region is Wales, where 75 per cent of people have taken steps to make their homes greener over the past year.

In last November the Co-operative Bank launched a mortgage package for those customers looking to reduce their carbon footprint.

Tags: GBP, Brits, november, homes greener, co operative bank, Cavity wall insulation, last november

Related Entries

  • Green mortgages to become the ‘norm’
  • Gordon Brown announced during his Budget yesterday that people who take out a mortgage on a carbon-neutral home will no longer have to pay any stamp duty.This news, announced during what is widely expected to
  • Co-op: green products not necessarily more popular
  • So-called "green" financial services are not bought if the quality of the product is unacceptable, the Co-operative Bank said today.A spokesperson for the bank said that the consumer "does not want to sacrifice anything in
  • Green mortgages ‘not affected by the credit crunch’
  • Green mortgages have not been affected by the credit crunch, due to the "type of person" who takes one out claims one lender. Norwich and Peterborough Building Society said that, despite concern over interest rates,
  • Are banks playing on the consumer’s conscience?
  • Over recent months consumers in the UK have been finding more and more services and products that are going 'green', enabling them to get the services or products that they need whilst also helping the
  • HSBC offers new 5-year mortgage
  • A new 5.55 per cent, five-year fixed rate mortgage plan has been launched by HSBC.Following the base interest rate rise to 5.25 per cent last week, the package replaces HSBC's Green Sale mortgage with a
  • Thousands of elderly being forced to sell their homes
  • A leading charity for the elderly has recently stated that thousands of elderly homeowners in the UK are being forced to sell their homes each year in order to cope with the cost of going
  • Finance with a conscience gaining esteem
  • So-called green financial products are more popular now than ever, according to the Environmental Transport Association (ETA).It states that there is heightened awareness of environmental ethics and it is now a part of the public
  • Don’t bodge it yourself (BIY)
  • Homeowners are being encouraged to avoid partaking in any bodge it yourself (BIY) over the Bank Holiday weekend.According to Halifax Home Insurance, we spend £607 million on repairing the damage we do to our homes

Speak Your Mind

Tell us what you're thinking...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!