Creating a strong business case is essential to the development of any heat network or large scale decarbonisation project. We can help ensure your project is both technically and commercially viable, giving confidence to all stakeholders, funders and investors.
Setting clear goals for your project to drive change that will help create a strong strategy.
This is the first step to demonstrating that the costs, risk and benefits have been comprehensively analysed, and all possibilities have been considered.
Setting environmental goals to ensure projects are not only financially viable but maximise carbon emissions reductions now and in the future.
Is your project deliverable at a cost which is value for money? This aspect will assure that, not only are your goals met, but they will be done in a commercially viable way which achieves value for .
This aspect of your business case will demonstrate that the structure is in place for the delivery, monitoring and eventual evaluation of the scheme and show best practice will be adopted.
Water, ground and air source heat pumps are key renewable heat generation technologies currently on the market. They deliver high levels of efficiency and are an effective solution for organisations prioritising carbon reduction. Our latest heat pump project is predicted to save over 5,700 tonnes of CO2 per annum.
The UK has an abundance of excess heat resources which could be used to deliver heat and hot water through district heating networks. With strong government backing and fantastic exemplar projects such as Leeds PIPES, waste heat recovery is set to become a significant part of the UK's energy mix.
Biomass is a flexible technology which is suitable for projects of all sizes and can be incorporated into a larger scheme as a part of the energy mix. We have delivered biomass solutions for organisations including universities and hospitals and it offers a compelling business case mixed with strong environmental benefits.
Energy Storage promises to add resilience, flexibility to the UK's energy infrastructure whilst helping organisations to further reduce their carbon emissions. The various methods of energy storage promise to deliver a cleaner, more robust grid and networks which can meet the energy demands of the nation.