Kensa Heat Pumps have commenced construction of a new 1000m2 manufacturing and office facility on its current site at the former Mount Wellington Mine in Cornwall.
Coinciding with its 20th year anniversary, the new premises will see Kensa produce 30,000 ground source heat pumps every year, providing carbon savings equivalent to taking 60,000 cars off the road; that’s over one third of the cars in Cornwall*.
The privately-funded expansion will make Kensa the largest low carbon business in Cornwall, providing at capacity 150 jobs. With an existing market share of near 50%, Kensa forecasts annual growth of around 50% as Government introduces regulations to outlaw the use of high carbon fossil fuels, particularly in new build housing in just six years time; ground source heat pumps offer lower cost heat than mains gas, and are the lowest carbon heating technology.
James Standley, Managing Director of Kensa Heat Pumps, says:
Like Kensa’s current factory, the new premises will have underfloor heating and hot water fed by a ground source heat pump harnessing heat from water from the flooded mine workings below.
Simon Lomax, CEO of the Kensa Group comments:
Sarah Newton, MP for Truro and Falmouth, comments:
A finance package from HSBC has been provided for the new premises, as Mark Self, HSBC UK’s Business Banking Area Director for Cornwall, Devon and Somerset, comments:
Local architectural firm, D3 Architects, helped visualise Kensa’s ambitions, with a sympathetic design blending with the former mining site’s renovated buildings. Simon Longworth-Riggs, Owner of D3 Architects, comments:
Kensa’s new heat pump facilities are due for completion in January 2020.
*Reduction in cars on the road based on 160,974 vehicles currently licensed in TRpostcodes (Q1 2019).
Kensa welcomes new government-backed research confirming ground source heat pumps are the most efficient form of heating, and significantly more efficient than gas boilers.