Does the energy efficiency of a new dwelling vary with the socio-economic status of the area in which it is built?

November 7, 2019

(This research was presented by Melissa James at the Improving Residential Energy Efficiency (IREE) conference held in Brisbane in April 2019)

New residential buildings in Australia are subject to the energy efficiency provisions of the National Construction Code (NCC). When designed and built they must meet a prescribed minimum standard. Whilst this confers some protection to future occupants against poorly performing homes, in the interests of energy equity it is worth exploring whether the energy efficiency of dwellings being built in areas of lower socio-economic advantage differ at all from those being built in more socio-economically advantaged areas. It is more difficult and costly to maintain a comfortable and healthy temperature in a dwelling which is less energy efficient.

Using Nationwide House Energy Rating Scheme (NatHERS) certificate data and Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) socio-economic indexes for areas (SEIFA) data, this study found that in Australia, new houses (NatHERS class 1) planned to be built in more advantaged areas tend to have lower energy efficiencies than new houses planned to be built in less advantaged areas. On average, there was nearly one star difference between houses in least advantaged areas compared to houses in the most advantaged areas. This may be due to larger window/floor ratios in houses in the more advantaged areas. The differences in star ratings varied for each State and Territory (Table1).

State/TerritoryNCC ClassMin SEIFA (least advantaged)Max SEIFA (most advantaged)Star differencep-valueCertificate count
AustraliaHouse6361181-0.9<0.0001313785
ACTHouse104711710.3<0.00013963
NSWHouse6711181-0.9<0.000188160
NTHouse6901110-0.5<0.00011655
QldHouse6361148-1.3<0.000150644
SAHouse7431127-0.10.001410644
TasHouse8111089-0.3<0.00017174
VicHouse6351160-0.1<0.0001143404
WAHouse7171168-1.1<0.00018141

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Nationwide House Energy Rating Scheme
Supported by data from the Nationwide House Energy Rating Scheme (NatHERS) www.nathers.gov.au