On a visit to Kensa’s Cornwall factory the Shadow Secretary for Energy and Net Zero was impressed with what he saw from the UK’s leading Ground Source Heat Pump manufacturer.
Ed Miliband, the Shadow Secretary for Energy and Net Zero, toured Kensa’s Cornwall factory to see how some of the UK’s leading Ground Source Heat Pump solutions are being developed.
Joined by local Labour candidates Perran Moon and Jayne Kirkham, Mr Miliband met with Kensa’s CEO, Tamsin Lishman, and other employees to discuss the British company’s plans to decarbonise heat and hear more about their vision to deliver affordable, renewable heating and cooling to millions of people across the UK.
£70m in investment from Legal & General and Octopus Energy, Kensa is working with communities and businesses across the UK to deliver its heat decarbonisation solution – Networked Heat Pumps.
Networked Heat Pumps consist of ground source heat pumps installed in individual properties, whether that’s flats, terraced streets or new-build homes, connected to a shared network of underground pipework, providing each property with low-cost, renewable heating, hot water and cooling.
The Government has an ambition to install 600,000 heat pumps a year by 2028. Powered by the wider adoption of Networked Heat Pumps, Kensa expects to contribute significantly to this figure, ramping up heat pump production to 70,000 a year by the end of the decade and creating over 7,000 green UK manufacturing jobs in the process.
This year, Kensa launched its newest ground source heat pump, the Shoebox NXProduct
Shoebox NX. The compact heat pump, designed for networked heat pumps, is five times more efficient than a gas boiler, will deliver heating and cooling for almost any home and is small enough to fit inside a cupboard.
Ed Miliband, Shadow Minister for the Department for Energy and Net Zero, told Kensa’s Tamsin Lishman:
Following the visitKensaCEO, Tamsin Lishman, said:
Kensa Group, the leading ground source heat pump specialist, has appointed a dynamic new senior leadership team to help meet the UK’s target for 600,000 heat pump installations a year by 2028.
An Edwardian-era social housing estate in Chelsea, central London, is the latest ‘complex to decarbonise’ building to get the renewable heating treatment, successfully busting myths about whether heat pumps can work for old and existing buildings.
Croydon Council have commenced a pilot scheme with Kensa to install a low-carbon fifth generation district heating system for its residents that will cut the cost to residents and the environment.