Technical

English Heritage: Greening our history

English Heritage
Ruth Knight: “Be lean, be mean, be green – that’s the mantra” (Image: Julie Kim)
How do you decarbonise historic buildings? Will Mann meets English Heritage head of climate and sustainability Ruth Knight to hear about its climate action plan.

From prehistory to the Cold War, English Heritage cares for over 400 buildings and monuments. These range from the recently acquired Thornborough Henges in Ripon – the ‘Stonehenge of the North’ – to York’s nuclear bunker, which was in use as recently as 1991.

The direct carbon footprint of English Heritage’s estate is a sizeable 4,400 tonnes of CO2 a year (scope 1 and 2 emissions) – and it has set a tough target of a 20% reduction by 2025. The organisation aims to reach net zero by 2040.

“Our carbon reduction programme is ambitious,” says head of climate and sustainability Ruth Knight, who will be speaking at CIOB’s annual conservation conference on 25 April.

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