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The Life Scientific

Brenda Boardman on making our homes energy efficient.

The Life Scientific

BBC

Society & Culture, Personal Journals, Science

4.61.4K Ratings

🗓️ 21 September 2021

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

When did you last really think about the amount of electricity your household uses? Are all your appliances A rated? Have you switched to LED lights? And what about the Energy Performance Certificate of your home? Is there room for improvement there?

For decades now, Brenda Boardman has been thinking about how to reduce the amount of energy we use in our homes. We have Brenda to thank for the rainbow-coloured energy efficiency labels with their A- G ratings that appear on new fridges, freezers, TVs, dishwashers, and washing machines. As a result of these labels and subsequent legislation, it’s no longer possible to buy an energy inefficient fridge or incandescent light bulbs. And there’s a strong incentive for manufacturers to make appliances ever more energy efficient. But the introduction of the Energy Performance Certificate for homes has been less successful.

So, is achieving carbon net zero in our homes a realistic proposition?

Brenda tells Jim Al-Khalili how much she learnt travelling the world, having just missed out on a place at university. And why in her thirties she decided to study part-time for a degree. Working and bringing up children at the same time, it took a while to complete a degree and then a PhD. But, aged 48, Brenda began her academic career working at the Environmental Change Institute in Oxford and has no regrets about the time she spent getting to know who she was an what the world was like.

Producer: Anna Buckley

Transcript

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0:00.0

Before you listen to this BBC podcast, I'd like to tell you why I love podcasting.

0:04.5

I'm Sasha Johansson, I'm an Assistant Commissioner for the BBC and I work on making podcasts.

0:11.1

My real passion is discovering unbelievable unheard stories and working with the biggest

0:16.9

stars who can really bring those stories to life.

0:20.1

I love the whole process of making podcasts from the spark of an idea to hearing the final

0:26.0

edit.

0:27.0

There's nothing like it.

0:28.0

What makes BBC podcast special is that we're working for you, so whatever we commission

0:32.6

has to reflect the things that you care about and love, wherever you are in the UK.

0:37.0

So if you like this BBC podcast, there's so much more to discover.

0:40.6

Have a listen on BBC Sounds.

0:42.4

Hello, I'm Jim Arkelele and this is the Life Scientific.

0:46.5

The deal is I get to talk to some of the amazing men and women who are trying to understand

0:51.0

our world and to make it a better place and you get to find out what makes them get out

0:55.8

of bed in the morning.

0:57.6

Hello, with the next big climate conference on the horizon in Glasgow this November, today

1:03.4

I'm talking to a woman who spent a lot of time thinking about how we use energy in our

1:08.0

homes and how we can use less of it.

1:11.1

Brenda Bordman worked as a secretary for many years before deciding to study part time

1:15.4

for a degree and then a PhD.

1:18.6

Working and bringing up children at the same time, it took a while.

1:22.0

At age 48, she became an Oxford academic working at the Environmental Change Institute

...

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