The Cost of Not Zero for Households in 2026
How British households are paying lower bills thanks to net zero technologies
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Successive Governments in the UK have implemented policies backing technologies that reduce our use
of fossil fuels, such as renewables, insulation, heat pumps and electric vehicles. Successive fossil fuel
crises over the past five years have added thousands of pounds to household bills for gas, electricity
and fuels. The only households which have been in some way shielded from fossil fuel prices are those
that have net zero upgrades.
This report finds that a typical household is likely to save almost £1,600 this year if it has four key net
zero improvements: £330 from insulation upgrades and an electric heat pump, £650 from solar panels
with a battery, and £600 from an EV, all supported by a specialist electricity tariff. However, many
households do not yet have these upgrades, and the higher bills that they are still paying are the ‘cost
of not zero’.
For homes that had originally been at the worse level of EPC band F, with higher heating bills, the
savings this year would be around £1,750. Again, many households are still paying these higher bills.
For each of these net zero technologies, either the upfront cost is already cost-competitive or
Government support is available to assist households. The upfront costs are lower if, rather than being
retrofitted into existing homes, the technologies are installed when homes are built. However, major
improvements to building standards have been delayed by over a decade, and will finally come into
force in 2027, over 20 years since the first Government consultation on zero carbon homes.
Heating a new home is cheaper than for the average home, but is costing more than it should – up to
£460 more this year than if it had been built with better insulation and a heat pump to the standard
that will finally be implemented in 2027. Added to the savings from solar panels and an EV, and the
cost of not zero for a household in a new home can reach £1,700 this year.
Investment is clearly required, but in the background renewables are helping to protect households
from volatile gas prices affecting electricity bills. Contracts for Difference contribute to greater price
stability, and pay back to customers when wholesale prices are high. And all renewables help to push
gas power generation off the system and so limit its opportunities to set higher prices, with large wind
farms cutting the day-ahead wholesale price by up to a third last year, compared to if most of the
wind power had instead been provided by gas power generation.
While not quantified in this analysis, fossil fuels also contribute to higher food prices through the costs
of fertilisers and energy used throughout the supply chain, alongside the impacts of climate change in
the UK and overseas, with foods hit by extreme weather rising in price four times faster than others.
