Veolia has launched its new Ecothermal Grid offer, unveiling a £1bn pipeline of low-carbon heat network projects due by 2030.
The company aims to expand the role of district heating to cut emissions from buildings, which currently generate 37% of the UK’s CO₂ output.
Only 3% of UK heat demand is currently met by district heating but the Government wants this to reach 20% by 2050.
Veolia says meeting this target could save 15m tonnes of carbon and transform the UK’s heating landscape. The company is now urging ministers to strengthen regulatory support so low-carbon heat networks can scale quickly and reliably.
Its project pipeline spans Wiltshire, London, Bristol, Yorkshire and Cambridgeshire, including £210m in schemes already secured for 2025.
A key milestone is the completion of Phase One of the Southwark 2.0 district heating network.
This extension supplies 2,500 homes with heat generated from Veolia’s energy-from-waste plant and already saves 8,000 tonnes of CO₂ each year.
Once complete, the network will reach nearly 7,000 homes and save a further 14,000 tonnes annually.
Veolia has also been appointed preferred partner for a 5th-generation heating and cooling network at the Wellcome Genome Campus, which will use geothermal and data-centre heat.
Veolia accelerates low-carbon heat with ‘Ecothermal Grid’ pipeline appeared first on Energy Live News.
