Innovative school heating system harnesses heat from thermal spring
- Public and Commercial
- 5 min read
Quick summary
- Bold plan sees only natural thermal spring in Wales become a renewable heat source for village school and bowls pavilion
- UK-based Ground Source Heat Pump specialists, Kensa, have installed an innovative system that uses warm spring water to heat two council buildings
- Historic Taff’s Well spring, once believed to provide medicinal properties, gets a new community role
- The highly efficient open-loop water source heat pump system installed by Kensa is expected to cut carbon emissions from heat by close to 80%
- It is the latest renewable school heating system retrofit project completed by Kensa
Ffynnon Taf Primary School and the Pavilion at Taff’s Well Bowling Club in Taff’s Well, Wales, have had a bold new heating system installed by Kensa, the UK-based Ground Source Heat Pump specialists, that uses naturally occurring heat from the only thermal spring in Wales – the historic Taff’s Well Spring.
This unique water source heat pump system harnesses natural heat from the warm spring water, which emerges from deep beneath the earth at around 21oC, to provide the two council-owned properties with low-carbon heating and hot water.
Using the innovative clean heating method instead of gas is expected to cut the school and pavilion’s carbon emissions linked to heating by close to 80%. It also demonstrated a way of using Kensa’s ground source heat pumps without drilling vertical boreholes to access heat energy stored in the ground.
The bold idea of using the spring to heat buildings was initially proposed by the Friends of Taff’s Well community group, who were looking at other ways the historic spring could benefit the local community.
This project follows other retrofit renewable heating installations completed in non-domestic buildings by Kensa. Using ground source heat pump technology the UK’s leading manufacturer and solutions provider has futureproofed heating and lowered carbon emissions caused by heat in multiple UK schools and council properties.
The unique installation also highlights the versatility of Kensa’s ground source heat pump systems and forms part of Rhondda Cynon Taf Borough Council’s ambitious plans to decarbonise by 2030.
How the system works:
- Kensa’s ground source heat pumps, found in thousands of UK properties, are usually set up to source energy from the ground to provide heating and hot water.
- The one-of-a-kind installation at Taff’s Well pumps warm water from the spring and passes it through a nearby heat exchanger, which is connected to Kensa’s ground source heat pumps housed inside the school and pavilion.
- In this highly energy-efficient system, heat energy stored in the warm spring water is absorbed and converted by the heat pumps into usable energy for the school and pavilion’s heating and hot water systems.
- While in the system, the water is confined to its own pipework, mostly hidden under the ground and out of sight, and doesn’t encounter any other substances to ensure there’s no issue of contamination or pollution.
- To keep the connecting pipework hidden and to avoid above-ground damage, Kensa horizontally drilled hundreds of meters between the Well, the school, and the pavilion.
- After passing through the system, the clean water is emptied back into the Well’s overflow, feeding into the River Taff.
- This is the only system installed by Cornwall-based Kensa that uses a natural thermal spring as a heat source.
On Tuesday 16th July 2024, Kensa’s Dr Stuart Gadsden visited the site, along with representatives from Rhondda Cynon Taf County Borough Council, to demonstrate to pupils from the Ffynon Taf Primary School’s climate council how their new low-carbon heating and hot water system works.
Dr Stuart Gadsden, Commercial Director at Kensa, said:
Ffynnon Taf Primary School Headteacher, Kathryn Price, said:
Jon Arroyo, Energy and Carbon Reduction Manager at Rhondda Cynon Taf County Borough Council, said: