Removed after just a few months: EPC labels can no longer be consulted online “for fear of perverse side effects” | Domestic

Energy performance certificates of private buildings can no longer be consulted online. The Flemish government is stopping the “well-intentioned measure” for fear of “perverse side effects”, reports Energy Minister Zuhal Demir (N-VA).

Since mid-October, everyone has been able to find out the EPC label of a building via an online tool. The Flemish government mainly introduced this so that potential buyers could check the EPCs on real estate websites.

The measure was therefore “well-intentioned and noble”, Demir reports in a communiqué. In addition, not all information from the EPC could be consulted, security was built in so that search robots could not collect the information and the initiative received the green light from the Flemish Supervisory Commission, the privacy watchdog.

However, according to Demir, concerns have arisen about possible “perverse side effects that mean that the information would not be used for the right purposes and would be publicly abused as a status symbol, which it is not.” “There was also the fear that a slippery slope would be followed in which more and more information would be shared publicly,” it said.

To rule out these perverse effects, the tool has been offline for several weeks. The regulations that regulated public access were abolished.

The reporting obligation remains

It remains mandatory to state the energy score or the EPC label when you sell or rent a building. When transferring a building with poor energy performance, it must also be stated that the building is subject to a renovation obligation.

READ ALSO. ▶ “By 2050, all homes must have an EPC label A”: but what does that value actually indicate?(+)

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