Technical

Heat networks: a fast-advancing low-carbon technology

Heat networks provide only a small proportion of the UK’s current heating needs, but have huge potential to deliver much more, says Jonathan Monkcom.

The government is planning a heat network powered by waste energy captured from Parliament (image: Dreamstime).
The government is planning a heat network powered by waste energy captured from Parliament (image: Dreamstime).

Heat networks hit the headlines late last year when news broke of plans to create a system in Westminster to heat 1,000 buildings in Central London, including the National Gallery and Houses of Parliament. The proposed heat network would be the UK’s largest and could be powered by recovered waste heat from a local sewer system, the River Thames and the London Underground.

Such networks are common in continental Europe but largescale networks in the UK are usually limited to estate use on hospitals, educational campuses, cultural collections and horticulture. According to the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero, just 3% of the UK heat needs are currently met by heat networks, but projects like the Westminster scheme could see that grow to 20% by 2050.

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