RFP QuestBeta
ClosedStage · preprocurement

The Committee On Climate Change

Early engagement notice - The distribution of Net Zero co-benefits

R&DCPV 73000000
ValueValue not published
Deadline25 Sept 2022
Published1 Sept 2022
RegionLondon
Timeline
Published 1 Sept 2022ClosedCloses 25 Sept 2022
Match for your company
Sign up free to see how well this tender matches your company — the score, the signals that align, and where the gaps are.
The brief

The Climate Change Committee (CCC) is an independent, statutory body established under the Climate Change Act 2008.

Our purpose is to advise the UK and devolved governments on emissions targets and to report to Parliament on progress made in reducing greenhouse gas emissions and preparing for and adapting to the impacts of climate change.

The CCC's Sixth Carbon Budget scenarios imply growing and enduring savings in operating costs, alongside a major investment programme.

To 2030, the largest cost increases affecting households are for decarbonising buildings.

Large savings are available for households in other areas, most notably in transport from the shift to electric cars.

However, even in areas where costs are likely to fall relative to today, the distribution of costs and savings could create both 'winners' and 'losers' during the transition.

Achieving Net Zero in the UK will also result in significant benefits to human health from better air quality, less noise, more active travel and a shift to healthier diets.

Changes to land use and farming practices that cut emissions can also improve air quality and water quality and benefit biodiversity, resilience to climate change and bring recreational benefits.

Benefits could partially or fully offset costs.

As set out in the CCC's Sixth Carbon Budget advice, a key challenge on the path to Net Zero is how to spread the costs and benefits of the transition across the economy: for households, businesses and the Exchequer.

The CCC recently commissioned Frontier Economics to develop a set of household archetypes (using Ofgem's archetypes as a starting point) and a distributional impacts model, to explore the costs faced by households from decarbonising homes and transport.

The archetypes developed are shown in Table 1.

This analysis will only tell part of the story, as it does not yet incorporate the co-benefits enjoyed by households alongside any direct financial costs or savings.

We are therefore interested in exploring the co-benefits of our Sixth Carbon Budget scenarios that the 15 archetypes developed by Frontier could face.

We are inviting feedback on early procurement ideas for this, to gauge the feasibility of undertaking credible and robust analysis in this space, before deciding whether to put out a project to tender. *** see attachment for more information ***

What this bid requires

Skills, tools & certifications

Detected from the notice — the capabilities and credentials this bid calls for. Click one to see who wins that work.

Buyer intelligence

Make the case to bid

Reveal who to approach at The Committee On Climate Change, and generate a go-to-market strategy from their news, accounts and people.

Source & provenance
OCID
5b3f42b1-2044-403e-8332-8b99072fbd71
Stage
preprocurement · Closed
Source
Contracts Finder
Buyer ref
BL 09/22
View the original notice on Contracts Finder

Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Source data © Crown copyright.

Market context

Who wins this kind of work

The suppliers and buyers around this opportunity — drawn from official award data. Drag to orbit; click a node to explore.

Top suppliers & buyers in Research & Development

Assembling the market network…

The Committee On Climate Change’s tender network

Assembling the network…

Also open now

Similar open tenders

Homes for Net Zero Phase 3 (HfNZ P3)

Department for Energy Security & Net Zero

Closes 21 Aug 2026R&D
£7.7mValue

Nature-based interventions evidence review: ecosystem function, benefits, and nature-related risks

Natural England

Closes 17 Jul 2026R&D
£41kValue