Pioneering augmented reality brings pathway to decarbonisation to life at COP26
- Neighbourhoods
- 4 min read
Glasgow street shows the only way to install 600,000 heat pumps each year and hit net zero is to replace the UK’s gas grid
Green Street in Glasgow, just a stone’s throw from COP26 shows that the only way to install 600,000 heat pumps a year and hit net zero is by replacing the UK’s current gas grid.
The inner city street has been brought to life using augmented reality to show how networked ground source heat pumps that mimic the current gas network are the cheapest way to decarbonise heat and could save the UK an estimated £1bn (https://auroraer.com/insight/decarbonisation-of-heat-in-great-britain/) a year to 2050.
The solution shifts responsibility from consumers getting rid of their gas boilers and installing individual infrastructure for ground source heat pumps on an ad-hoc house-by-house basis, to the pre-installation of utility-scale underground infrastructure that allows consumers to easily and cheaply change to ground source heat pumps when they’re ready.
The infrastructure is funded, owned and maintained by an energy or water company, local authority or private investor removing the cost from consumers who pay a standing charge similar to gas.
Simon Lomax, CEO of Kensa, the UK’s only manufacturer of ground source heat pumps, said:
Kensa’s ‘Welcome to Green Street (https://welcometogreenstreet.com/)’ launched at COP26, and produced with Emmy award winners Alchemy Immersive, proves how a whole systems approach to decarbonising how we heat our homes can unlock benefits across communities, and compliment and balance the electricity network as we come to rely more heavily on it with heating and electric vehicles.
Anthony Geffen, Creative Director and CEO of Alchemy Immersive said:
Simon added:
Kensa has been engaging with energy suppliers, the UK and Scottish governments and other leading organisations and continues to make progress to making the ‘Green Street’ solution a national reality. Thousands of properties across the UK are already enjoying the benefits of networked heat pumps.
Thenue Housing which has homes in Green Street, said it welcomed innovative and trailblazing solutions to the global climate emergency including those which relate to domestic energy consumption.
Eleanor Derbyshire, Head of Property Services at Thenue Housing, said:
Since 1999 Cornwall’s Kensa has saved over 1 million tonnes of carbon through ground source heat pump installations across social housing, new build and retrofit homes and businesses.
It was the first company to prove a solution for flats and apartments through its small ‘Shoebox’ heat pump, used by many city councils and recognised by the Greater London Authority as the most efficient, lowest carbon, lowest cost solution for heating and cooling high-rise buildings.
To experience Green Street please visit www.welcometogreenstreet.com (http://www.welcometogreenstreet.com/)