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Raising the MEES regulations

The government launched its first public consultation in 2019 on its proposals to amend the MEES Regulations to raise the minimum standard for MEES from the current EPC rating of E to either B or C by 2030. There was significant support for increasing that minimum standard to B in 2030, but the questions of how to get there and how to make the system work as intended now need to be answered. On 17 March 2021, a further consultation was published that focuses on, and responds to, concerns and challenges around compliance and enforcement in the light of that increased minimum standard and also considers the possibility of an interim milestone.

The government is proposing to raise the minimum EPC standard to C in 2027 in order to encourage incremental improvements, rather than seeing landlords waiting until 2030 before taking action. This will need to be enforced, and to deal with the issue of the enforcement authorities not having data readily available in order to identify breaches of MEES, they are proposing that each change should be preceded by a two-year “compliance window”. The compliance window will begin with the requirement for landlords to present a valid EPC for their let properties to a central register, which will then identify the properties that are substandard and in need of improvement.

This marks a crucial change of approach, as until now landlords have not been required to present a valid EPC to be checked, and it has been left to the enforcement authorities to identify for themselves the properties to which MEES applies and the current EPC rating. This is not straightforward and is resource-intensive for the enforcement authorities and explains why there has been so little enforcement of MEES to date.

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