The ESRI said those affected would need, on average, €480 of additional income a year to exit fuel poverty.

One in 10 households couldn't afford adequate heat - ESRI

by · RTE.ie

Some 14% of Irish households in 2024 said they were unable to afford adequate warmth or pay energy bills in full, according to a new report from the Economic and Social Research Institute.

The study found that this was well below the 25% level recorded during the financial crisis that began in 2008.

The findings are based on research carried out before the recent rise in energy prices caused by the war in Iran.

The ESRI said that households experience energy poverty when they are unable to afford essential services, such as adequately heating their homes, lighting, cooking or powering appliances.

This poverty, it said, is driven by a combination of low disposable income, high energy costs and poor housing and is strongly related to income inequality, unemployment and deprivation.

When multiple measures of energy affordability are taken into account, the ESRI added, 30% of households experience some form of energy affordability challenge.

The report found that the most cost-effective supports are those targeting the least well off.

It said that people affected would need, on average, €480 of additional income annually to exit fuel poverty.

That would cost the State €370m per year.

The figure is much lower than the up to €575m spent on universal electricity credits by the Government in 2024.

The ESRI research was funded by the Department of Climate, Energy and Environment.