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The Remediation of Dangerous Cladding

Inquiry

In June 2017, 72 people lost their lives in the Grenfell Tower disaster. The resulting public inquiry found that aluminium composite material (ACM) cladding had played a significant role in the spread of the fire. The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) has committed £5.1bn to remove and replace dangerous cladding. It has said will be the limit of taxpayer contributions to remediation, with building owners and developers to be held to account for sharing in the costs of fixing dangerous cladding, and leaseholders protected from liability for fixing problems they did not cause. MHCLG reported in January 2024 that almost 4,000 buildings were within the scope of its schemes, of which nearly 800 had completed remediation.

In its 2020 report on remediating dangerous cladding, the Committee expressed its condemnation at the badly missed target of June 2020 for all high-rise blocks to have Grenfell-style cladding removed. The MHCLG accepted at the time that progress had been unacceptably slow. The report highlighted a system-wide failure in a building regulation system that it described as not fit for purpose, with tens of thousands of people left to live in fear and financial limbo.

In its 2024 follow-up to its own 2020 investigation into the remediation of dangerous cladding on high-rise buildings, the National Audit Office (NAO) looked at how well Government has designed its schemes to maximise the identification and remediation of unsafe buildings. It also inquired into whether remediation is progressing as expected, and how well MHCLG is managing taxpayer exposure to remediation costs.

Based on the NAO report, the Committee will hear from senior MHCLG and Homes England officials on topics including:

- Progress and timelines on identification and remediation;

- Protection of taxpayers’ money;

- The Government’s approach to risk around building safety; and

- Plans for deploying the £1bn announced for cladding remediation in the Budget effectively and efficiently.  

Please note the Committee is unable to help with individual cases.  If you need help with an individual problem you are having, you may wish to contact your constituency MP.

Please look at the requirements for written evidence submissions and note that the Committee cannot accept material as evidence that is published elsewhere.

If you have evidence on these issues please submit it here by 23:59 on Monday 20 January 2025.

This inquiry is no longer accepting evidence

The deadline for submissions was Monday 20 January 2025.

Reports, special reports and government responses

View all reports and responses
17th Report - The Remediation of Dangerous Cladding
Inquiry The Remediation of Dangerous Cladding
HC 362
Report
Response to this report
Treasury minutes: Government response to the Committee of Public Accounts on the Seventeenth report from Session 2024-25
HC 362
Government Response
Letter from the Executive Director at Home Builders Federation relating to the challenges affecting housebuilding: Building Safety Levy, 17 March 2025
Inquiry The Remediation of Dangerous Cladding
Correspondence
Letter from the End Our Cladding Scandal & Non-Qualifying Leaseholders relating to Committee’s inquiry into Dangerous Cladding, 17 February 2025
Inquiry The Remediation of Dangerous Cladding
Correspondence

Oral evidence transcripts

View all oral evidence transcripts
3 February 2025
Inquiry The Remediation of Dangerous Cladding
Witnesses David O'Leary (Executive Director at Home Builders Federation), Rhys Moore (Executive Director of Public Impact at National Housing Federation), Councillor Adam Hug (Chair of Local Infrastructure and Net Zero Board at Local Government Association, and Leader at Westminster Council), and Giles Grover (Co-Lead at End Our Cladding Scandal)
Oral Evidence
Shared Owners’ Network (RDC0143)
The London Fire Brigade (RDC0144)
End Our Cladding Scandal (RDC0145)

Contact us

  • Email: pubaccom@parliament.uk
  • Phone: 020 7219 8480 (strictly media enquiries only – contact us via our email for general enquiries)
  • Address: Public Accounts Committee, House of Commons, London, SW1A 0AA