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Department of Finance & Personnel issue letters to domestic property sellers
Dear Seller
Energy Performance Certificates Regulations – sales of existing
dwellings
Your estate agent has advised you that from 30 June 2008 any existing
dwelling which is for sale has to have an Energy Performance Certificate
(EPC).
This is a requirement of the Energy Performance of Buildings (Certificates and
Inspections) Regulations (NI) 2008 which were made by the Department of
Finance & Personnel on 10 April 2008. The duty in the Regulations is for the
seller (not the seller’s agent) to make an EPC available to a prospective
purchaser at the earliest opportunity. Basically, the requirement is that an
EPC should be made available when a potential purchaser asks to see written
details of the dwelling or when s/he requests to view the dwelling and in any
event before entering into a contract to sell.
The EPC has to be accompanied by a report that contains recommendations
for the cost-effective improvement of the energy performance of the property.
The objective of this requirement is not only that the prospective purchaser is
advised of the energy performance of the dwelling at the earliest opportunity,
but is also advised of the cost-effective improvements that can be carried out
if s/he purchases the dwelling. If you intend to buy another house you will find
such recommendations for your prospective house very useful, particularly
given the recent rises in fuel costs.
An EPC may only be produced by a trained and accredited energy assessor
who is a member of a Scheme accredited by Government and therefore
licensed to practice as an Energy Assessor. You are free to engage any
accredited assessor to undertake the energy assessment of your dwelling.
Your estate agent may be trained to provide the EPC, or he may offer to
engage an assessor on your behalf. Who you engage to carry out this work is
your choice, provided that the Assessor belongs to a recognised Accreditation
Scheme.
The Regulations include powers of enforcement and for the issuing of penalty
charge notices (levying of fines) for failure to comply with the requirements
outlined above. The fine is £200 for each breach of the Regulations.
It is our intention to encourage compliance with the Regulations rather than
issuing penalty charge notices, and advising you of these requirements is one
of the ways of doing that. However, where we find that there is an ongoing
failure to comply, we will not hesitate to use the enforcement provisions which
would ultimately lead to a fine being imposed (with the duty to still obtain an
EPC).
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