But, critically, NZN is designed with London’s distinct challenges in mind. On a typical London street, you will find a patchwork of Victorian terraces, post-war homes, converted flats, new builds and council blocks – all with different tenures and ownership arrangements.

London’s architectural diversity is distinctive and to be celebrated, but it also makes large-scale retrofit particularly complex. For years we have asked individual households and landlords to navigate a confusing array of schemes, funding pots and requirements. The evidence is clear: this fragmented approach drastically limits uptake and drives up costs.

The neighbourhood-by-neighbourhood design of NZN tackles this head-on. By assessing what homes in a defined area need and co-ordinating improvements collectively, boroughs can create a simple, affordable and practical retrofit offer for every household – whether residents live in social housing, rent privately or own their home outright. This approach creates the conditions for whole-street and whole-estate improvements, rather than leaving large swathes of homes behind.

“The once-in-a-generation chance to transform London’s housing stock through a dynamic mix of public and private finance is an opportunity that must be seized with both hands”

The delivery of warmer homes and lower bills through the adoption of NZN would demonstrate that national and local authorities can collaborate effectively to deliver practical, visible change. At a time when many residents question whether government can deliver on long-term commitments, a model that produces immediate and tangible benefits could help to restore confidence.

The government’s forthcoming Warm Homes Plan – an initiative to make green upgrades to five million homes and cut energy bills – is a timely moment to put this model into practice. Alongside the West Midlands Combined Authority, London Councils has presented a scalable national model to DESNZ that, if backed, could become the blueprint for area-based decarbonisation across the country.

The once-in-a-generation chance to transform London’s housing stock through a dynamic mix of public and private finance is an opportunity that must be seized with both hands. With the right national support, the London Net Zero Neighbourhood Programme can deliver warmer homes, lower bills and more resilient neighbourhoods, strengthening both London’s economy and its path to net zero.

This is an opportunity neither Londoners nor the government can afford to miss.

Catherine McGuinness, advisory board member, Cities Commission for Climate Investment (3Ci) and former policy chair, City of London