Oxford City Council and partners carrying out study to investigate city-wide heat network

The City Council is carrying out a study looking at how local buildings could share highly efficient methods of generating electricity and heat with neighbours to reduce the city’s carbon footprint.Government Opportunities

The £136,000 study, largely funded by the Government’s Department of Energy and Climate Change, is investigating the feasibility of installing a network of pipes under the city centre and Headington areas to do this.

It is hoped that businesses in the city centre will be able to connect to the network and heat their properties from the same high-efficiency boilers and CHP (Combined Heat and Power) plant – with renewable energy and waste heat potentially playing a role too.

The hope one day is to have a large network of heat pipes running under Oxford, potentially heating homes in some of the city’s housing estates by utilising excess heat from big heat users, such as local industry.

This would not only cut the heat wastage and carbon emissions but also save residents and businesses about 20 per cent on their bills.

If successful, the scheme could become the single biggest contributor towards the city reducing its carbon emissions. Theoretically, it has the potential to cut Oxford’s total carbon emissions by around 20 per cent – or more if renewable energy technologies are deployed.

Find more information here.

Councillor John Tanner, City Executive Board Member for A Clean and Green Oxford, said:

“Oxford City Council punches well above its weight and leads by example when it comes to tackling climate change, which is one of the biggest threats not just to the city through flooding but to the entire planet.

“We have ambitions to achieve even more, which is one of the reasons why we have teamed up with Oxfordshire’s other district councils to launch a set of proposals that will devolve more power to local people and unlock £6bn of funding.

“These devolution proposals will give the City Council powers over transport, for the first time since 1974, enabling us to do a lot more to tackle climate change and air quality in the city.

“One simple example of this is that the heat pipe network will suddenly become significantly easier to achieve if we become the highways authority for the city because we could install the pipes under either the roads or pavements – both of which the County Council currently has responsibility for.”

 

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