Climate
Transforming Homes with Energy Saving Grants: A Path to Sustainability
AS energy costs soar and environmental concerns heighten, Energy Saving Grants offers a lifeline to homeowners, tenants, and landlords across the UK. With 100% government-backed funding, they provide essential support to make homes more energy-efficient, reducing both energy bills and carbon footprints.
Comprehensive Energy Solutions
Energy Saving Grants excels in delivering a broad spectrum of energy-saving measures, tailored to meet diverse household needs. These measures include:
- Insulation Upgrades: From cavity wall insulation to loft and internal wall insulation, these upgrades are pivotal in minimizing heat loss and enhancing home comfort.
- Heating Improvements: The Boiler Upgrade Scheme helps replace outdated, inefficient boilers with modern, energy-efficient models. Additionally, the scheme covers installation of renewable heating solutions such as heat pumps.
- Renewable Energy: Solar panels and wind turbines convert natural energy sources into electricity, providing sustainable energy options that reduce reliance on fossil fuels.

Easy and Accessible Process
Energy Saving Grants makes the process of applying for and receiving grants straightforward and stress-free. The journey begins with a free, no-obligation consultation where energy experts assess eligibility and recommend suitable improvements. The company handles all paperwork and coordinates with Trustmark-approved installers, ensuring high-quality installation and compliance with all regulations.
Benefits of Energy Efficiency
The advantages of improving your home’s energy efficiency are manifold:
- Cost Savings: Significant reductions in heating and electricity bills can lead to substantial long-term savings.
- Enhanced Comfort: Well-insulated homes with efficient heating systems offer a more consistent and comfortable living environment.
- Environmental Impact: Lower energy consumption contributes to a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, playing a crucial role in combating climate change.
Empowering Communities
Energy Saving Grants has a proven track record of transforming homes and lives across the UK. For instance, a family in Birmingham upgraded their heating system and insulated their home, resulting in a 35% reduction in their annual energy bills. Similarly, a landlord in Glasgow utilized the Boiler Upgrade Scheme to install new boilers across multiple properties, enhancing tenant satisfaction and reducing maintenance costs.
Available Grant Schemes
Energy Saving Grants administers several government schemes, including:
- Energy Company Obligation (ECO) Scheme: Focused on improving energy efficiency in homes with poor energy ratings.
- Local Authority Flex (LA Flex) Scheme: Allows local authorities to allocate funding based on specific local needs.
- Great British Insulation Scheme (GBIS): Provides grants for comprehensive insulation solutions.
- Home Upgrade Grant (HUG): Targets homes with outdated heating systems or inadequate insulation.
- Boiler Upgrade Scheme (BUS): Offers funding for modern, efficient boilers and renewable heating solutions.
Real-Life Transformations
The impact of these grants is evident in numerous success stories. One notable example involves a household in Manchester that benefited from the Great British Insulation Scheme, resulting in a warmer home and annual savings of over £500. Another success story is a family in London who received a complete heating system overhaul through the ECO scheme, drastically improving their quality of life and reducing energy costs.
Join the Movement
Now is the perfect time to make your home more energy-efficient. Whether you’re looking to reduce your energy bills, improve home comfort, or contribute to environmental sustainability, Energy Saving Grants provides the expertise and support you need. Visit Energy Saving Grants to check your eligibility and start your journey towards a more sustainable future.

Climate
Welsh windfarms to power major construction materials firm
A MAJOR construction materials company has signed a long-term deal to use renewable energy from Welsh windfarms as part of efforts to cut carbon emissions.
Energy firm RWE has agreed a 15-year contract to supply electricity to Breedon Group plc, which operates sites across Great Britain producing materials including concrete, asphalt and cement.
Under the agreement, RWE will provide around 70 gigawatt hours of renewable electricity each year from its windfarm portfolio.
The power will initially come from the Gwynt y Môr offshore windfarm, about 24km off the coast of North Wales in the Irish Sea. From 2033, supply will switch to the Brechfa Forest West onshore windfarm in Wales.
The electricity will support the production of key building materials, helping Breedon reduce emissions linked to its energy use in a sector widely regarded as difficult to decarbonise.
RWE said the agreement highlighted the role renewable energy can play in helping heavy industry move towards lower-carbon operations.
Olaf Lubenow, head of commodity solutions at RWE, said: “This agreement underlines our commitment to supporting the construction materials sector on its journey towards a more sustainable future.
“By supplying renewable electricity from our wind portfolio, we are helping to reduce the carbon footprint of Breedon’s operations.”
Breedon said the deal would also provide long-term energy stability while supporting its wider sustainability plans.
Donna Hunt, the company’s sustainability director, said the agreement marked “a meaningful step forward”.
She said: “It secures long-term energy supply and helps accelerate the reduction of emissions from our operations.”
The company has set targets to cut emissions across its business by more than 20% by 2030 and to reach net zero by 2050.
The agreement reflects a growing trend of major industrial firms turning to renewable energy to help meet climate targets while managing rising energy costs.
Business
Pembroke Power Station National Grid shutdown power plans
A CALL to site specialist diesel generators at Pembroke Power Station to help keep the lights on in the event of a National Grid shutdown has been lodged with county planners.
In a screening application to Pembrokeshire County Council, RWE Generation UK PLC, through Ove Arup & Partners Ltd, wants to site up to six containerised diesel generators, diesel storage tank(s) and electrical connections at Pembroke Power Station, Pwllcrochan, near Pembroke.
The application site is within the site of the existing Pembroke Power Station, a combined-cycle gas turbine (CCGT) station which began commercial operation in September 2012, with a gross consented capacity of about 2,199 megawatts electric (MWe), replacing the previous oil-fired power station which operated for almost 30 years and was decommissioned in 1999.
A supporting statement says, subject to confirmation, it is considered to comprise permitted development, the scheme “a standalone plant, with its own fuel supply, capable of starting up, operating and shutting down independently from the power station”.
It adds: “It is required only in an emergency to maintain plant status and keep the power station operationally ‘ready’ in the event of a total or partial shutdown of the National Grid system. It is not required for the normal operation of the power station and does not extend its capacity, which remains as already consented, therefore it is not considered a change or extension.”

On need, it says it is mandatory that all electricity generators of over a megawatt have to adopt a new minimum standard of asset resilience; power stations “must be capable of restoring demand on the National Grid electricity transmission system in the event of a total or partial shutdown of the National Grid system”.
“The Power Station does not currently meet this new asset resilience standard, therefore new back-up power, control philosophy and on-site services that support site critical systems enabling the power station to remain ready to operate must be implemented.
“RWE is required to install a new enhanced emergency site auxiliary solution (diesel generators and diesel storage tanks) at the power station for resilience against the failure of the interconnected electricity distribution network into which it is normally connected in order to satisfy the Grid Code requirements by the mandated implementation deadline of December 31, 2026.
“RWE will make operational and fuelling provision, within its new resilience design at Pembroke power station of up to 120 hours, in order to provide capability to a slightly enhanced standard known to be valued by the National Energy System Operator (‘NESO’) in certain emergency network scenarios.”
It says construction is hoped to start in July 2026, lasting approximately nine to 12 months, the main part across the summer months.
The call will be considered by county planners at a later date.
Business
Pembrokeshire St Brides Castle biomass and solar scheme
PLANS for a green energy scheme at a Pembrokeshire former country house which is now holiday apartments have been given the go-ahead.
In an application to Pembrokeshire Coast National Park, HPB Ltd, through agent Acanthus Holden Architects, sought permission for a biomass boiler plant and installation of 16 rows of solar panels to the south of the tennis courts, St Brides Castle, St Brides, along with the removal of two tennis courts, two polytunnels, two sheds and relocation of a container.
Marloes and St Brides Community Council: Supporting
An officer report recommending approval said: “St Brides Castle. Listed Grade II* is a former country house (now holiday apartments) just south-west of the small settlement of St Brides.
“The house and its listed ancillary buildings stand prominently within a large grade-II-registered park and garden. The development site lies immediately south of the registered asset, outside of its boundary.”
It added: “Although in a sensitive location, the proposed scheme is well-screened, utilising an existing hedged enclosure. The proposed panels do not protrude over the hedge line, the proposed extra planting to the south and west providing further screening. The proposed building, also well-screened, is of traditional design, proportions and materials.”
The application was conditionally approved by park planners.
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