INTIEAIreland · House of Tomorrow ProgrammePolicyIn force

House of Tomorrow Programme

The House of Tomorrow programme, which was originally developed as part of the implementation process of the 1999 Green Paper on Sustainable Energy, offers support for research, development and demonstration projects aimed at generating and applying technologies, products,…

Last changed 5 years ago.

Extracted view for reading · Original for compliance evidence

Lifecycle

  1. Effective
  2. Last change

Country / jurisdiction: Ireland · Year: 2001 · Status: In force · Level: National · Type: Voluntary

The House of Tomorrow programme, which was originally developed as part of the implementation process of the 1999 Green Paper on Sustainable Energy, offers support for research, development and demonstration projects aimed at generating and applying technologies, products, systems, practices and information leading to the greater use of sustainable energy in Irish housing. The main focus of the programme, which was launched in September 2001, was on stimulating the widespread uptake of superior energy planning, design, specification and construction practices in both the new home building and home improvement markets. Under the programme developers who designed buildings to consume 40% less energy for space and water heating than the current Building Regulations minimum standards, whilst also incorporating innovative energy saving and low CO2 technologies, could be awarded EUR 8 000 per dwelling, with an a minimum of 10 and a maximum of 50 dwellings per scheme (the criteria and levels of grant funding available through House of Tomorrow programme changed over time). In light of the new residential building regulations announced in 2007 (to come into effect in 2008), the programme closed to new applications from 30 September 2007. The new Regulations will make mandatory the standards promoted by the House of Tomorrow Programme. The Irish government is considering the most appropriate mechanism to support the governments policy to revise the building regulations again in 2010, with a view to further increasing the eneregy efficiency requirements for new houses.

Official source: http://www.sei.ie

Source

https://www.iea.org/policies/246

Canonical document at the regulator. Always cite this URL — not the Vantage detail page — in compliance evidence.

Related in International

INTEnergy Newsoilprice:oilprice-article-44736NewsIn force

The Trillion-Dollar AI Shockwave Nobody Is Ready For

The biggest investment opportunity of the AI era has very little to do with software or chips. The market has already priced both. The real story is power: who owns it, where it sits and how cheaply it can be delivered to AI workloads at scale. A small data center company that almost no one on Wall Street has heard of just answered all three of those questions in front of the entire industry. In May 2026, Bitzero Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ:AIBZ) signed a binding letter for a 15-year lease with OneQode for the entire 110 megawatts at its Namsskogan,…

17 hours ago
INTEnergy Newsoilprice:oilprice-article-44737NewsIn force

Why the Next Billion Barrels of Oil Demand Could Come From Storage

The closure of the Strait of Hormuz and the stranding of more than 10 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude oil in the Persian Gulf was a wake-up call for import-dependent countries to expand their capacity to hold strategic and commercial reserves. Many countries, especially in the Asia Pacific, are looking to build new reserve capacity to boost their energy security and never again be caught off-guard by a massive supply disruption like the one triggered by the closure of the most important oil and LNG chokepoint. From India to Australia, energy…

18 hours ago
INTEnergy Newsoilprice:oilprice-article-44735NewsIn force

Trump Admin Takes Aim at Oil, Gas Drilling Costs

The U.S. federal government will reduce costs for oil and gas drillers by slashing red tape for the industry, aiming to tempt drillers to expand on federal lands. In a news release this week, the Interior Department said it would revise the Bureau of Land Management’s rule for federal land leasing for oil and gas drilling as well as the BLM’s waste prevention rule, by essentially loosening both to reduce the cost burden on energy companies. Under the revised rules, the cleanup cost of an abandoned well will fall from $500,000 to as…

19 hours ago
INTEnergy Newsoilprice:oilprice-article-44731NewsIn force

The AI Boom Is Set to Fast-Track China's Coming Nuclear Energy Dominance

The United States is still the largest producer of nuclear energy in the world – but probably not for long. Decades of political ambivalence have left the domestic nuclear sector in a state of neglect. Far more reactors are aging out than being constructed, and the country’s few attempts at building new nuclear fission reactors have been controversial, expensive, and slow to get off the ground. After Georgia’s Plant Vogtle finally came online years late and billions over budget in 2024, zero new reactors have since come under…

20 hours ago
INTEnergy Newsoilprice:oilprice-news-44737NewsIn force

US Crude Oil Inventories Continue To Falter, SPR Struggling To Pick Up the Slack

The American Petroleum Institute (API) estimated that crude oil inventories in the United States fell by 765,000 barrels in the week ending June 19. In the week prior, US crude oil inventories fell by 8.33 million barrels. Although commercial crude oil inventories excluding the SPR have been falling rapidly for the last 2+ months, shedding 53 million barrels over the last ten weeks, US crude inventories are only down 2.1 million barrels so far this year, according to API data, kept in check by draws from the SPR. Slowing the inventory bleeding…

21 hours ago