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BUILDING (GENERAL) AMENDMENT REGULATION 2012 (NO 2) (NO 33 OF 2012)
2012
LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY FOR
THE
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
Building (General) Amendment Regulation
2012 (No 2)
SL2012-33
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Presented by
Mr Simon Corbell
Minister for Environment and Sustainable Development
EXPLANATORY STATEMENT
Background
The Construction Occupations Legislation Amendment Act
2010 (No 2) (the Amending Act) created powers for the regulation of building
energy efficiency assessments for regulatory purposes. The legislation is
intended to apply to residential energy efficiency assessments for compliance
with energy efficiency disclosure requirements under the Civil Law (Sale of
Residential Property) Act 2003 and the Residential Tenancies Act
1997, and to assessments undertaken for compliance with certain energy
efficiency provisions in the ACT building code.
The reforms bring
building assessors into the construction occupations licensing framework and
provide for minimum criteria for the quality of assessments and the
standardisation of energy efficiency information in certificates and statements
provided by assessors.
On 1 May 2011 licensing requirements came into
effect for building assessors preparing energy efficiency rating statements for
existing dwellings for sale or lease of residential premises. The amending
regulation inserts new provisions in the Building (General) Regulation
2008 (the regulation) to extend regulation to assessments prepared and used
for compliance with prescribed energy efficiency provisions. This fully enacts
the regulatory reforms commenced with the Amending Act.
The regulation
prescribes which provisions of the building code require an energy efficiency
certificate to demonstrate compliance and to form part of a building approval
application.
The regulation also makes consequential amendments to
references to class 10 buildings required after the introduction of a new
classification of 10c private bushfire shelters in the Building Code of
Australia.
Overview
New provisions for energy
efficiency certificates
Subsection 26 (2) (g) of the Building Act
2004 (the Act) provides that if required under an energy efficiency
provision, an application for a building approval must be accompanied by an
energy efficiency certificate.
Under section 139C an energy efficiency
provision is a provision of the Act or the building code, prescribed by
regulation, that requires building work, or proposed building work, or parts of
building work, or parts of proposed building work, to comply with stated energy
efficiency requirements.
The Act is supported by the construction
occupations licensing framework. An energy efficiency certificate must be
prepared by a building assessor licensed under the Construction Occupations
Licensing Act 2004 (the Licensing Act) in accordance with any relevant code
of practice made by regulation or by the ACT construction occupations registrar
under s104A of the Licensing Act.
There are a number of energy
efficiency performance requirements that apply to residential buildings. These
include standards for individual appliances as well for the energy efficiency
(thermal efficiency) of a dwelling. As a performance-based standard, the
building code allows various methods to assess the energy efficiency of a
dwelling. Many of these methods can be carried out by a relatively simple
assessment of the information contained in building plans and specifications and
do not require the use of complex tools or an independent assessment.
In
assessing the thermal efficiency of a class 1 or 2 dwelling or a class 4 part of
a building the building code allows the use of house energy rating software.
This compliance method is not mandatory; however, given the design flexibility
it provides and the use of energy efficiency ratings in the ACT’s
mandatory disclosure legislation most practitioners in the ACT use the software
verification or “energy rating” method.
An energy efficiency
assessment undertaken on house energy rating software requires skills and
knowledge in the design and construction of buildings, the principles of thermal
efficiency, the properties of construction materials and the operation of energy
rating software. The regulation prescribes the provisions of the Building Code
of Australia (BCA) and the ACT Appendix to the BCA that allow the use of house
energy rating software as those requiring an energy efficiency certificate.
The requirement to provide an energy efficiency certificate will only
apply to provisions including an energy rating method. Standard requirements for
a building certifier to satisfy his/herself about compliance apply to other
energy efficiency compliance methods.
The output from approved software
can differ from package to package. The energy efficiency certificate will be an
approved form, which will standardise the minimum information required to
demonstrate compliance with relevant provisions.
Amendments to
existing provisions
References to class 10
buildings
Sections 24, 29, 33, 34, 36 and schedule 2 part 2.2 item 7
refer to class 10 buildings. The definition of building classes are taken from
the BCA classifications. Prior to the 2011 version of the BCA, class 10
buildings included class 10a buildings and class 10 buildings.
A class
10a building is a non-habitable building being a private garage, carport, shed,
or the like. A class 10b structure is a structure such as a fence, mast,
antenna, retaining or free-standing wall or swimming pool.
The Victorian
Bushfire Royal Commission of 2009 (VBRC) highlighted evidence of market failure
for private bushfire shelters, which previously could be classified as a class
10a building. It highlighted that there may be a lack of transparency in the
level of quality of shelters and their capacity to save a life. These
include:
• confused understanding about standards;
and
• contradictory advice on the survival rate within
shelters.
With the aim of providing a national standard for private
bushfire shelters, the Australian Building Codes Board inserted comprehensive
performance requirements for construction of private bushfire shelters into the
2011 edition of the building code.
A class 10c classification for such
buildings was also inserted into the 2011 edition of the building code. It
relates only to private bushfire shelters, which are only associated with a
class 1 residence, and only for occupants of that residence.
Standards
for class 10c buildings are sufficiently different to those for less complex
buildings such as pergolas and walls or those not intended to provide the same
level of life safety to require a separate classification.
The building
code provides that a reference to the term ‘class 10’ includes a
reference to the classes within the class 10 classification. Therefore,
references in the regulation to ‘class 10’ will correspondingly
refer to class 10a, 10b and 10c. Thus, consequential amendments to the
regulation are required where the regulation ought to be referring to class 10a
or 10b buildings, rather than to ‘class 10’ buildings, where it is
not intended that the provisions apply to class 10c bushfire
shelters.
The amending regulation clarifies that the existing provisions
are not intended to apply to private bushfire shelters.
Regulatory
impact
Part 5.2 of the Legislation Act outlines when a regulatory
impact statement is required for a subordinate law.
Energy efficiency
provisions
The regulation introduces provisions that are consequential to
an existing reform and regulatory impact statement prepared for cabinet
consideration accompanying the Construction Occupations Legislation Amendment
Bill 2010 (No 2).
In tabling the legislation the then Minister for
Planning stated that:
“...given the reliance on energy ratings to
demonstrate compliance with the building code and when selling a property, it is
increasingly important that consumers and the building industry have confidence
in the rating system.”
He further clarified that the reforms were
to provide “stronger regulation for both mandatory disclosure and BCA
compliance.”
Regulatory impact analysis and consultation for the
reforms included the full scope of regulation. The regulations are consistent
with the intent of the building assessment reforms and do not create new policy.
References to class 10 buildings
The regulation
also clarifies references to subclasses of class 10 buildings. These are
editorial changes consequential to the introduction of a new class of building
(10c) into the building code.
A regulation impact statement was prepared
by the Australian Building Codes Board about the implementation of new standards
for class 10c private bushfire shelters. It takes account of how the Territory
was expected to amend their building approval and certification systems to align
with the premises standards and new class 10c private bushfire shelter
construction requirements. The regulation impact statements was assessed against
the Council of Australian Governments Best Practice Regulation requirements by
the Office of Best Practice Regulation and cleared for release. The document can
be found at http://www.abcb.gov.au/~/media/Files/Download%20Documents/Archived/Consultation/Private%20Bushfire%20Shelter%20Final%20Decision%20RIS.ashx
.
Subsection 36 (1) (h) provides that a regulation impact statement
need not be prepared for a matter involving the adoption of an Australian or
international protocol, standard, code, or intergovernmental agreement or
instrument, if an assessment of the benefits and costs has already been made and
the assessment was made for, or is relevant to, the ACT. Additionally, the
amendments do not fundamentally affect the law’s application or operation
(s36 (1) (e)). The ACT adopted provisions for class 10c buildings in
2011.
Outline of Provisions
Clause 1 Name of regulation
Clause 1 names the regulation as the
Building (General) Amendment Regulation 2012 (No 2).
Clause 2
Commencement
Clause 2 states the regulation commences on the day after
its notification.
Clause 3 Legislation amended
Clause 3 notes
that the regulation amends the Building (General) Amendment Regulation
2008.
Clause 4 Section 29
Clause 4 deletes the
existing reference to class 10 buildings in section 29 of the regulation and
substitutes a reference to class 10a buildings.
The existing section
provides for circumstances where unaltered parts of a building need not comply
with the energy efficiency provisions for external glazing in the building code.
Energy efficiency provisions apply to class 10a buildings associated with class
1 dwellings such as houses and townhouses. The provisions do not apply to class
10b or 10c structures.
The new reference clarifies the application of
the provisions to class 10a buildings only. This is a minor editorial change
consequential to amendments made to the Building Code of
Australia.
Clause 5 Section 36 and example
Clause 5
deletes the existing reference to class 10 buildings in section 36 of the
regulation and example and substitutes a reference to class 10a or class 10b
buildings.
The provisions for determining fundamental non-compliance
under subsection 36 (2)
apply to class 10a and 10b buildings. The
specialised nature of a class 10c building fundamental non-compliance is not
determined by these provisions.
Clause 6 New section 44AA
Clause 5 inserts a new section in part 5 of the Regulations which
prescribe the provisions that require an energy efficiency certificate to be
provided as part of a building approval application.
The energy
efficiency provisions are those that allow the use of house energy rating
software to calculate the heating and cooling loads of a dwelling. Heating and
cooling loads indicate the relative thermal efficiency of the
dwelling.
The provisions include compliance methods in the BCA and in the
ACT Appendix to the BCA. The ACT Appendix applies energy efficiency performance
requirements to alterations and additions to existing class 1 and associated
class 10a buildings. Some compliance pathways permit the use of house energy
rating software to show that the performance standard for energy efficiency
(heating and cooling loads) is met.
The clause also inserts a new
definition for house energy rating software. Certain software packages that meet
minimum requirements for accuracy and consistency of assessment are approved for
use under energy rating compliance methods. The software is accredited for
assessing thermal efficiency and calculating an energy efficiency rating against
a series of defined benchmarks. The definition is consistent with that in the
BCA but also allows for the ability of the ACT construction occupations
registrar to prescribe software that a building assessor licence can be endorsed
for and to make codes of practice that may allow alternative
software.
New definitions for the ACT Appendix to the building code and
relevant energy efficiency provisions are also included to clarify the
application of the clause.
Clause 6 Schedule 1, section 1.4 (1),
examples
Clause 6 amends sections 24, 33, 34, and schedule 2, part 2.2,
item 7. It deletes the existing reference to class 10 buildings the listed
sections of the regulation and substitutes a reference to class 10a and 10b
buildings.
This is required to clarify that the provisions do not apply
to, or include, the new classification of 10c private bushfire
shelters.
This is a minor editorial change consequential to amendments
made to the Building Code of Australia.