1. Overview and Context
Energy poverty refers to a household’s inability to access essential energy services (heating, lighting, electricity) at an affordable cost. It is not just about high bills—it also includes under-consumption of energy due to financial constraints, which can harm health and wellbeing.
The issue is becoming more important due to:
- Rising energy price volatility
- Climate transition costs
- Geopolitical instability
- Structural inequalities in income and housing
The report emphasises that energy poverty is multidimensional, shaped by:
- Income levels
- Energy prices
- Housing quality and energy efficiency
- Broader socio-economic inequalities
It is therefore both an economic and social justice issue.
2. Scale of Energy Poverty in Ireland
- Around 14% of households self-reported energy poverty in 2024
- Using broader measures, over 30% of households experience some form of energy affordability issue
- In 2015, ~600,000 households (over one-third) met at least one energy poverty criterion
➡️ Key point:
The scale varies dramatically depending on how you measure it.
3. Measurement: Why It Matters
Ireland’s official measure:
- HSEEI-10% → households spending >10% of income on energy
Problems with this measure:
- Data only collected every 5 years
- Misses households that under-consume energy (hidden poverty)
- Underestimates the true scale
Alternative measures:
-
Self-reported indicators
- Inability to afford adequate warmth (IAAW)
- Arrears on utility bills (AUB)
- Available annually → useful for short-term monitoring
-
Expenditure-based indicators
- High energy share, low income–high cost, low expenditure, etc.
- Better for structural analysis
-
Union Indicators (combined measures)
- Count households meeting any criterion
- Provide the most realistic estimate of overall energy hardship
➡️ Conclusion:
No single indicator is sufficient. A multi-indicator system is essential.
4. Multidimensional Nature of Energy Poverty
Different indicators capture different groups:
-
Some households:
- Spend too much on energy
-
Others:
- Spend too little (due to deprivation)
-
Others:
- Report hardship but don’t show high expenditure
➡️ Result:
- Limited overlap between indicators
- Each measure reveals a different “slice” of the problem
Union indicators show:
- Energy poverty is far more widespread than any single measure suggests
5. Vulnerable Groups (Who Is Most at Risk?)
The report identifies consistent high-risk profiles:
Most vulnerable:
- Low-income households
- Renters (especially private sector)
- Single-parent households
- Unemployed individuals
- Households with poor health or disability
- Rural households
- People in older, inefficient housing
Additional patterns:
- Female-headed households face higher risk
- Younger households rely more on supports
- Vulnerabilities often overlap and reinforce each other
➡️ Key insight:
Energy poverty is clustered disadvantage, not isolated hardship.
6. Affordability Risk Framework
The report proposes a framework based on three factors:
- Income level
- Energy costs
- Share of income spent on energy
Households are mapped into risk zones, identifying:
- Current energy poverty
- Future vulnerability (important for climate transition)
Structural vulnerability is defined as:
- Income poverty plus additional risk factors (e.g. renting + single parenthood)
7. Severity: The Energy Poverty Gap
A major contribution of the report is estimating how severe energy poverty is.
Findings:
-
Households need:
- €11–€45 per week to escape energy poverty
-
Average annual gap:
- ~€480 per household
Policy implication:
-
Closing the gap for all vulnerable households would cost:
- ~€370 million
Compare:
- Universal electricity credit (2024): €550–575 million
➡️ Conclusion:
Targeted supports could achieve the same outcome at ~40% lower cost.
8. Structural Drivers
The main drivers of energy poverty are:
1. Income (most important factor)
- Low disposable income = highest risk
2. Housing conditions
- Poor insulation
- Old buildings
- Energy inefficiency
3. Broader cost pressures
- Rent
- Healthcare costs
- Household composition
4. Energy prices
- Short-term shocks can rapidly worsen affordability
Key finding:
-
Rising incomes in recent years helped offset:
- Higher energy prices
- Cost-of-living pressures
9. Policy Recommendations
A. Measurement Reform
Adopt a multi-indicator monitoring system, including:
- IAAW (short-term shocks)
- HSEEI-2M (structural burden)
- LAEE (hidden deprivation)
B. Short-Term Policies
Use responsive tools during shocks:
- Targeted energy credits
- Bill supports
- Deferred payment schemes
- Emergency protections
⚠️ Must be targeted, not universal.
C. Long-Term Policies
Address structural causes:
- Home retrofitting
- Energy efficiency upgrades
- Clean energy investment
- Income supports
D. Better Targeting
Align energy policy with:
- Social protection system
- Welfare payments
- Housing policy
10. Welfare and Energy Poverty
Energy-poor households typically rely on:
- Housing supports
- Child-related benefits
- Fuel allowance
- Disability supports
Less reliance on:
- Old-age pensions (due to younger demographic profile)
➡️ Insight:
Energy poverty is closely tied to existing welfare dependency patterns.
11. Overall Conclusions
- Energy poverty in Ireland is widespread, complex, and underestimated
- It is driven primarily by income inequality and structural housing issues
- Measurement using a single indicator is inadequate
- Targeted policies are significantly more cost-effective than universal supports
-
Addressing energy poverty requires:
- Coordination across energy, housing, and social policy
Bottom Line (for students)
Energy poverty isn’t just about high bills—it’s about how income, housing, and energy systems interact. If policymakers measure it badly, they target it badly, and that leads to wasted spending and missed households.
