Fuel Poverty Trends in England (2003 - 2008)
The UK Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) publishes annual statistics on household fuel poverty. A household is considered to be in fuel poverty if over 10% of household income is spent to maintain a sufficient heating regime (21 degrees C). The key factors that affect fuel poverty are: energy efficiency of the property, cost of energy and household income. The 2010 report, which includes data collected through 2008, is available, http://www.decc.gov.uk/assets/decc/Statistics/fuelpoverty/610-annual-fuel-poverty-statistics-2010.pdf. Fuel poverty statistics are available here at both the national and regional (local authority and parliamentary constituency) level; regional statistics are available for 2006 only.
Citation Formats
TY - DATA
AB - The UK Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) publishes annual statistics on household fuel poverty. A household is considered to be in fuel poverty if over 10% of household income is spent to maintain a sufficient heating regime (21 degrees C). The key factors that affect fuel poverty are: energy efficiency of the property, cost of energy and household income. The 2010 report, which includes data collected through 2008, is available, http://www.decc.gov.uk/assets/decc/Statistics/fuelpoverty/610-annual-fuel-poverty-statistics-2010.pdf. Fuel poverty statistics are available here at both the national and regional (local authority and parliamentary constituency) level; regional statistics are available for 2006 only.
AU - Hallett, KC
A2 - (DECC), UK Department of Energy and Climate Change
DB - Open Energy Data Initiative (OEDI)
DP - Open EI | National Renewable Energy Laboratory
DO -
KW - UK
KW - cost of energy
KW - energy efficiency
LA - English
DA - 2010/10/01
PY - 2010
PB - National Renewable Energy Laboratory
T1 - Fuel Poverty Trends in England (2003 - 2008)
UR - https://data.openei.org/submissions/491
ER -
Hallett, KC, and UK Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC). Fuel Poverty Trends in England (2003 - 2008). National Renewable Energy Laboratory, 1 October, 2010, Open Energy Data Initiative (OEDI). https://data.openei.org/submissions/491.
Hallett, K., & (DECC), U. (2010). Fuel Poverty Trends in England (2003 - 2008). [Data set]. Open Energy Data Initiative (OEDI). National Renewable Energy Laboratory. https://data.openei.org/submissions/491
Hallett, KC and UK Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC). Fuel Poverty Trends in England (2003 - 2008). National Renewable Energy Laboratory, October, 1, 2010. Distributed by Open Energy Data Initiative (OEDI). https://data.openei.org/submissions/491
@misc{OEDI_Dataset_491,
title = {Fuel Poverty Trends in England (2003 - 2008)},
author = {Hallett, KC and (DECC), UK Department of Energy and Climate Change},
abstractNote = {The UK Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) publishes annual statistics on household fuel poverty. A household is considered to be in fuel poverty if over 10\% of household income is spent to maintain a sufficient heating regime (21 degrees C). The key factors that affect fuel poverty are: energy efficiency of the property, cost of energy and household income. The 2010 report, which includes data collected through 2008, is available, http://www.decc.gov.uk/assets/decc/Statistics/fuelpoverty/610-annual-fuel-poverty-statistics-2010.pdf. Fuel poverty statistics are available here at both the national and regional (local authority and parliamentary constituency) level; regional statistics are available for 2006 only.},
url = {https://data.openei.org/submissions/491},
year = {2010},
howpublished = {Open Energy Data Initiative (OEDI), National Renewable Energy Laboratory, https://data.openei.org/submissions/491},
note = {Accessed: 2025-05-11}
}
Details
Data from Oct 1, 2010
Last updated Jul 29, 2014
Submitted Jul 29, 2014
Organization
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
Contact
KC Hallett