EnviroVent reveals sustainability roadmap to achieve net-zero

EnviroVent has revealed its Roadmap to Net-Zero, which will see the company achieve net-zero carbon across its business by 2030. The company’s Roadmap to Net-Zero will generate emissions savings of over 1,000 tonnes of carbon in the next 10 years.

Jane McLean, Quality & Environmental Systems Manager at EnviroVent, explains: “Environmental sustainability is very important to us as a business and to many of our public and private sector customers. We’re delighted to be revealing our Roadmap to Net-Zero, which gives a very clear route that we will follow to achieve our environmental targets. To add to this, all our products are designed to use minimal amount of energy and we recycle parts from systems we replace, wherever possible. As a result, customers buying our ventilation systems can be safe in the knowledge they are giving back to the planet.”

To meet the ambitious target of Net-zero carbon by 2030, EnviroVent has put in place a number of sustainability practices to reduce the company’s carbon footprint. Recently this has included committing to planting 5,000 trees per year as part of a new partnership with MoreTrees, an organisation that will plant trees responsibly on the company’s behalf over a long-term period and then manage them for life. Planting 5,000 trees every year will remove a total of approximately 1,500 tonnes of CO2 from the atmosphere.

EnviroVent’s Roadmap to Net-Zero also includes plans to relocate to a zero carbon purpose-built headquarters in 2022, which will be heated sustainably via air source heat pumps and  its electricity will be generated via solar panels. The building will also incorporate a MVHR heat recovery system, which recovers the energy from extracted air to retain a comfortable environment for employees and ensure all year round good indoor air quality. In addition, the headquarters will feature optimum building design for insulation and will have electric charging points for vehicles to promote green travel by staff and visitors.

The company has also focused on reducing emissions through its fleet as part of its Roadmap to net-zero via a combination of upgrading company vehicles and replacing diesel-fuelled cars with hybrid vehicles. For example, EnviroVent’s chosen plug-in hybrid vehicles will allow a major reduction in CO2 emissions and a 40 per cent reduction in fuel consumption compared to a petrol or diesel vehicle.

EnviroVent is also involved in a number of projects that will help its social and private housing customers to reduce the carbon footprint and energy usage in their housing stock. Project 80 by the housing association Midland Heart is a new build scheme in Birmingham that will meet the Government’s Future Homes Standard, reducing carbon emissions by up to 80%. EnviroVent’s energiSava 250 MVHR (Mechanical Ventilation Heat Recovery) systems are being used within a number of the 12 homes being built here. Homes will be monitored constantly as this research and development programme will be used to inform the Government’s next consultation about the Future Homes Standard, which will be compulsory for all new homes built by 2025.

Rebecca McLean, Marketing and Product Director at EnviroVent, says: “We are delighted to be involved in the Project 80 programme in providing the whole house MVHR systems to ensure good indoor air quality for residents. To be part of such a collaborative project to inform debate and input into this important consultation will be essential as we move forward to understand more about the Future Homes Standard.”

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