NHC welcomes new funding for energy efficiency improvements

The government has announced funding allocations for Wave 3 of the Warm Homes: Social Housing Fund (previously known as the Social Housing Decarbonisation Fund or SHDF) and for the Warm Homes: Local Grant, which are set to improve the energy efficiency of up to 170,000 homes.

Tracy Harrison, Chief Executive of the Northern Housing Consortium said:

“The North has lots of older, colder homes – with 1 in 5 built before 1919 and almost a million households currently in fuel poverty – so this Warm Homes investment will make a big difference to people’s lives. NHC members, including housing associations, local authorities and combined authorities across the North, are working to tackle this by installing tens of thousands of energy efficiency measures from heat pumps to home insulation. 

This extra funding from government is very welcome and will boost these efforts, helping to cut carbon emissions, support jobs, cut fuel bills and tackle fuel poverty. We also welcome the move to devolve retrofit funding in the North through the allocation of funding to Greater Manchester Combined Authority’s Integrated Settlement.  

This will allow funding to better align with locally led plans for economic growth, training and skills provision, as well as support greater collaboration between housing providers in Greater Manchester. We know there is continuing appetite from our members to continue to make our homes more energy efficient.”

In total, the third wave of the Social Housing Fund will see £1.29bn allocated across 144 individual projects. Funding will be distributed through one of two distinct funding routes. These are the Challenge Fund, which will work in a similar fashion to current funding programmes, and Strategic Partnerships which aim to provide a greater level of flexibility, and reduced up-front administrative requirements, for more experienced providers, or consortia of providers, in delivering their energy efficiency upgrades.

Just less than half of the total £1.29 billion of funding will be delivered through Strategic Partnerships, including a significant proportion of funding allocated to the North. For the North, these strategic partnerships will take the form of large partnerships of housing providers, led by a Mayoral Combined Authority. Major strategic partnerships for the North include:

  • Liverpool City Region Combined Authority – £48,090,405
  • Tees Valley Combined Authority (this consortium includes housing associations and local authorities in the North East and Yorkshire) – £43,910,533
  • West Yorkshire Combined Authority – £25,682,461

Major allocations through the Challenge Fund include North Yorkshire Council, whose £21 million allocation, was the single largest allocation through this route.

In addition, government announced a further £600 million for the Warm Homes: Local Grant. This funding is to be allocated to local authorities to improve the energy efficiency of homes of low-income households living in owner occupied or privately rented homes. In total, almost £150 million was allocated to 46 local authorities in the North across 23 bids. Allocations to councils in the North are in the table below:

Local authority Funding allocation (Local Grant)
Barnsley £1,538,552
Blackpool (as part of a consortium of 13 councils) £30,039,099
Bradford £7,106823
Calderdale £3,206,150
Cheshire East (as part of a consortium of 3 councils) £7,782,725
County Durham £2,055,853
Darlington (as part of a consortium of 4 councils) £13,953,865
Doncaster £1,604,111
East Riding of Yorkshire £1,500,000
Gateshead £1,500,000
Hartlepool £2,391,408
Kingston upon Hull £3,402,806
Leeds £5,963,439
Liverpool City Region (as part of a consortium of 6 councils) £31,805,813
Newcastle upon Tyne £2,294,325
North Tyneside £4,281,163
North Yorkshire £5,974,078
Northumberland £2,530,853
Sheffield £3,406,008
Sunderland £1,500,000
Wakefield £1,500,000
Westmorland & Furness (as part of a consortium of 2 councils) £11,828,581
York £2,037,677
   
North £149,203,329

 

The Greater Manchester Combined Authority (GMCA) will receive an allocation of this funding as part of the Warm Homes and Public Sector Decarbonisation Devolution Programme, as part of their integrated settlement.   Details of this will be  announced as part of the Spending Review.

Full lists of funding, for both the Challenge Fund and Strategic Partnerships of the Social Housing Fund, can be found here. The full list of funding allocations for the Local Grant can be found here.

 

NHC welcomes Government announcement about new ‘Plan for Neighbourhoods’

The government has recently announced a new ‘Plan for Neighbourhoods’, including a total of £1.5 billion of funding to support the delivery of a wide range of potential interventions in 75 selected neighbourhoods. The interventions cut across several key themes such as housing, employment, transport, health and wellbeing, and education.

Across the North of England, 29 neighbourhoods will be allocated funding worth a total of up to £580 million or 38.9% of the total funding allocation. The funding will be split 75% for capital spend and 25% revenue, with the first project spending released to local authorities from April 2026.

Each neighbourhood will be allocated up to £20 million over ten years and be required to establish a Neighbourhood Board to direct how funding is spent. Neighbourhood Boards will also be required to develop new ‘Regeneration Plans’ for their areas, to be submitted to the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government. This builds on the Long-term Plan for Towns announced by the previous government, with some additional funding. Selected neighbourhoods have until the 22nd April 2025 to finalise the membership of their Board, nominate a Chair and propose any changes to the boundaries of their ‘neighbourhood’.

The largest change, however, is that this new Plan does give a greater focus to the role of housing within regeneration.

Alongside the Plan, a list of pre-approved interventions was also published. These include:

  • Town centre or high street regeneration and public realm improvements
  • Resident engagement and consultation on estate regeneration schemes
  • Modernisation of social housing stock, including improving home energy efficiency
  • Improvements to green spaces and the wider physical environment
  • Commissioning and funding homelessness support
  • Improvements to make existing homes more resilient to overheating, flooding and other risks
  • Supporting the establishment of Community Land Trusts (CLT) to begin delivery of community-led housing initiatives
  • Funding for local museums and other cultural or heritage activities or ventures

The Plan hopes to champion local control of funding, with the Neighbourhood Boards being given increased freedom as to how funding is used to ensure it can align with the needs of the specific area. Mayoral Combined Authorities, where they exist, are also expected to play a role in the development of Regeneration Plans.

The prospectus for the Plan also directly references the last Labour government’s ‘New Deal for Communities’ as an influence behind the Plan for Neighbourhoods. The New Deal for Communities previously demonstrated significant success in improving 32 of 36 key headline indicators in the areas where it was present.

At the Northern Housing Consortium, we strongly support this development and the focus government is placing on regeneration.

Our Chief Executive Tracy  Harrison said: “We are pleased to see Government prioritise regeneration in the North, with increased investment through the new long-term Plan for Neighbourhoods.

 “Building on the previous Long Term Plan for Towns, it goes further by recognising housing as an integral part of regeneration. This is backed up with additional funding and acknowledgement of the importance of addressing homelessness, improving the quality of existing social housing, and referencing estate regeneration.

“We have consistently put forward the case to Government that regeneration must sit alongside investment in new homes to meet the needs of communities – so this is a positive step for the North.

“We are calling on the Government, through the Spending Review, to go further and establish a new funding stream for place-based, housing-led regeneration, which sits alongside a new Affordable Homes Programme with the flexibilities required to support regeneration.”

Alongside making a case for regeneration funding we have advocated more local control of such funding and the end to the ‘competitive funding pot’ model, including through our Pride in Place work.

The full list of Northern areas that will recieve funding is below:

Neighbourhood Local authority Region
Blyth Northumberland North East
Darlington Darlington North East
Eston Redcar & Cleveland North East
Hartlepool Hartlepool North East
Jarrow South Tyneside North East
Spennymoor County Durham North East
Washington Sunderland North East
Accrington Hyndburn North West
Ashton-under-Lyme Tameside North West
Burnley Burnley North West
Chadderton Oldham North West
Darwen Blackburn & Darwen North West
Farnworth Bolton North West
Heywood Rochdale North West
Kirkby Knowsley North West
Leigh Wigan North West
Nelson Pendle North West
Newton-le-Willows St Helens North West
Rawtenstall Rossendale North West
Runcorn Halton North West
Barnsley Barnsley Yorkshire & Humber
Castleford Wakefield Yorkshire & Humber
Dewsbury Kirklees Yorkshire & Humber
Doncaster Doncaster Yorkshire & Humber
Grimsby North East Lincolnshire Yorkshire & Humber
Keighley Bradford Yorkshire & Humber
Rotherham Rotherham Yorkshire & Humber
Scarborough North Yorkshire Yorkshire & Humber
Scunthorpe North Lincolnshire Yorkshire & Humber