Rethinking the measurement of energy poverty in Europe: A critical analysis of indicators and data

Energy poverty – which has also been recognised via terms such as ‘fuel poverty’ and ‘energy vulnerability’ – occurs when a household experiences inadequate levels of energy services in the home. Measuring energy poverty is challenging, as it is a culturally sensitive and private condition, which is temporally and spatially dynamic. This is compounded by the limited availability of appropriate data and indicators, and lack of consensus on how energy poverty should be conceptualised and measured. Statistical indicators of energy poverty are an important and necessary part of the research and policy landscape. They carry great political weight, and are often used to guide the targeting of energy poverty measures – due to their perceived objectivity – with important consequences for both the indoor and built environment of housing. Focussing on the European Union specifically, this paper critically assesses the available statistical options for monitoring energy poverty, whilst also presenting options for improving existing data. This is examined through the lens of vulnerability thinking, by considering the ways in which policies and institutions, the built fabric and everyday practices shape energy use, alongside the manner in which energy poor households experience and address the issue on a day-to-day basis.

[1]  Gregory L. Simon,et al.  The Great Indoors: Research frontiers on indoor environments as active political-ecological spaces , 2011 .

[2]  B. Heyman,et al.  Keeping warm and staying well: findings from the qualitative arm of the Warm Homes Project. , 2005, Health & social care in the community.

[3]  K. Dear,et al.  The health impacts of cold homes and fuel poverty , 2011, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[4]  Harriet Thomson,et al.  Reconciling fuel poverty and climate change policy under the Coalition government: Green Deal or no deal? , 2013, Social Policy Review 25.

[5]  C. Liddell,et al.  Fuel Poverty and Human Health : A Review of Recent Evidence , 2010 .

[6]  K Ashworth,et al.  Poverty and Social Exclusion in Britain , 2000 .

[7]  Peter Heindl,et al.  Measuring Fuel Poverty: General Considerations and Application to German Household Data , 2013 .

[8]  Sarah C. Darby,et al.  Metering: EU policy and implications for fuel poor households , 2012 .

[9]  Richard Moore,et al.  Definitions of fuel poverty: Implications for policy , 2012 .

[10]  Peter Townsend,et al.  Poverty in the United Kingdom: A Survey of Household Resources and Standards of Living , 1979 .

[11]  A. Ambrose Improving energy efficiency in private rented housing: Why don't landlords act? , 2015 .

[12]  J. Clinch,et al.  Fuel poverty, thermal comfort and occupancy: results of a national household-survey in Ireland , 2002 .

[13]  Olivia Ricci,et al.  Measuring fuel poverty in France: Which households are the most fuel vulnerable? , 2015 .

[14]  Manuela Guedes de Almeida,et al.  Operative Conditions Evaluation for Efficient Building Retrofit—A Case Study , 2013 .

[15]  Alison Koslowski,et al.  Fuel Poverty and High Rise Living: Using Community-Based Interviewers to Investigate Tenants' Inability to Keep Warm in their Homes , 2013 .

[16]  H. Meier,et al.  Energy affordability and energy inequality in Europe: Implications for policymaking , 2016 .

[17]  Stefan Bouzarovski,et al.  Energy poverty in the European Union: landscapes of vulnerability , 2014 .

[18]  Geoff Green,et al.  Living in cold homes after heating improvements: Evidence from Warm-Front, England’s Home Energy Efficiency Scheme , 2007 .

[19]  R. Gillard,et al.  Fuel poverty from the bottom-up: Characterising household energy vulnerability through the lived experience of the fuel poor , 2015 .

[20]  R. Miniaci,et al.  Energy affordability and the benefits system in Italy , 2014 .

[21]  S. McKay Poverty or preference: what do ‘consensual deprivation indicators’ really mean? , 2005 .

[22]  Harriet Thomson,et al.  Quantifying the prevalence of fuel poverty across the European Union , 2013 .

[23]  Carolyn Snell,et al.  Justice, fuel poverty and disabled people in England , 2015 .

[24]  Stefan Bouzarovski,et al.  A global perspective on domestic energy deprivation: Overcoming the energy poverty-fuel poverty binary , 2015 .

[25]  Euan Phimister,et al.  The Dynamics of Energy Poverty: Evidence from Spain , 2015 .

[26]  J. Healy,et al.  Fuel Poverty in Europe: A Cross-Country Analysis Using A New Composite Measurement , 2003 .

[27]  Stefan Bouzarovski,et al.  Energy poverty policies in the EU: A critical perspective , 2012 .

[28]  J. Hills,et al.  Getting the measure of fuel poverty: final report of the Fuel Poverty Review , 2012 .

[29]  M. Santamouris,et al.  Review of the indoor environmental quality and energy consumption studies for low income households in Europe. , 2015, The Science of the total environment.

[30]  D. ürge-Vorsatz,et al.  Unpacking the spaces and politics of energy poverty: path-dependencies, deprivation and fuel switching in post-communist Hungary , 2016 .

[31]  Paul McKenzie,et al.  Fuel poverty in Northern Ireland: Humanizing the plight of vulnerable households , 2014 .

[32]  Christine Liddell,et al.  Excess winter deaths in 30 European countries 1980-2013: a critical review of methods. , 2015, Journal of public health.

[33]  Amanda M. Thomson,et al.  Projections of emissions and removals from the LULUCF sector to 2050. Contract report for the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) , 2011 .

[34]  John A. Paravantis,et al.  Financial crisis and energy consumption: A household survey in Greece , 2013 .

[35]  S. Herrero,et al.  FUEL POVERTY IN HUNGARY A first assessment , 2010 .

[36]  S. Todd,et al.  Modelling a culturally sensitive approach to fuel poverty , 2006 .

[37]  Ute Dubois From targeting to implementation: The role of identification of fuel poor households , 2012 .

[38]  E. Poutsma,et al.  EUROPEAN FOUNDATION for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions , 1999 .

[39]  Gordon Rae,et al.  Measuring and monitoring fuel poverty in the UK: National and regional perspectives , 2012 .

[40]  R. Day,et al.  Conceptualising energy use and energy poverty using a capabilities framework , 2016 .

[41]  Brenda Boardman,et al.  Fixing Fuel Poverty: Challenges and Solutions , 2009 .

[42]  R. Day,et al.  Fuel poverty in the UK: beyond heating? , 2016 .

[43]  Diana Ürge-Vorsatz,et al.  Trapped in the heat: A post-communist type of fuel poverty , 2012 .

[44]  N. Katsoulakos Combating Energy Poverty in Mountainous Areas Through Energy-saving Interventions , 2011 .

[45]  S. Bouzarovski,et al.  Geographies of injustice: the socio-spatial determinants of energy poverty in Poland, the Czech Republic and Hungary , 2017 .

[46]  S. Bouzarovski,et al.  The EU Energy Poverty and Vulnerability Agenda: An Emergent Domain of Transnational Action , 2015 .

[47]  Linda Taylor,et al.  Fuel Poverty: From Cold Homes to Affordable Warmth , 1993 .

[48]  S. Friel Housing, Fuel Poverty and Health: A Pan-european Analysis , 2007 .

[49]  C. Liddell,et al.  Fuel poverty in the European Union: a concept in need of definition? , 2016 .

[50]  Adriana Gamazo,et al.  EURYDICE (2013): Key data on teachers and school leaders in Europe. 2013 edition Eurydice report (Luxembourg Publications Office of the European Union) , 2013 .

[51]  David E. Jacobs,et al.  Environmental burden of disease associated with inadequate housing: a method guide to the quantification of health effects of selected housing risks in the WHO European region. , 2011 .

[52]  Stefan Bouzarovski,et al.  Perceptions of Thermal Comfort and Housing Quality: Exploring the Microgeographies of Energy Poverty in Stakhanov, Ukraine , 2013 .

[53]  K. Brunner,et al.  Experiencing fuel poverty. Coping strategies of low-income households in Vienna/Austria , 2012 .

[54]  Stefan Buzar,et al.  The ‘hidden’ geographies of energy poverty in post-socialism: Between institutions and households , 2007 .

[55]  Jenny Love,et al.  From social and technical to socio-technical: Designing integrated research on domestic energy use , 2015 .

[56]  Diana Ürge-Vorsatz,et al.  Building synergies between climate change mitigation and energy poverty alleviation , 2012 .

[57]  A. Miazga,et al.  It's cold inside – energy poverty in Poland , 2015 .

[58]  T. Oreszczyn,et al.  Determinants of winter indoor temperatures in low income households in England , 2006 .

[59]  Stefan Bouzarovski,et al.  The energy divide: Integrating energy transitions, regional inequalities and poverty trends in the European Union , 2016, European urban and regional studies.

[60]  C. Liddell,et al.  Living in a cold and damp home: frameworks for understanding impacts on mental well-being. , 2015, Public health.

[61]  Kathryn C Conlon,et al.  Staying cool in a changing climate: Reaching vulnerable populations during heat events. , 2013, Global environmental change : human and policy dimensions.