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Sustainable tech can make existing homes carbon zero

Inefficient UK homes, which were built decades ago, can now do away with their gas boilers and get all their energy needs off-grid, new research by Nottingham Trent University shows.

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An image depicting sustainable home energy

Sustainable tech can make existing homes carbon zero

Inefficient UK homes, which were built decades ago, can now do away with their gas boilers and get all their energy needs off-grid by retrofitting a combination of existing renewable energy technologies, new research shows.

A study led by Professor Anton Ianakiev, an expert in civil engineering and carbon solutions at Nottingham Trent University (NTU), proves how millions of existing UK properties - which produce thousands of tons of Co2 per year - can become completely carbon-free.

The study centres on combining existing insulation technology with photovoltaic solar panels, air or ground-source heat pumps, shared small-scale wind turbines, and shared large-scale batteries and heat storage facilities.

The renewable energy technology is also located closely to the properties, rather than hundreds of miles away at a power station, doing away with the need to upgrade the grid.

The study - published in Elsevier’s Smart Energy journal – is based on research into 27 homes in Nottingham which were insulated with external wall insulation, with a 200mm core of glass wool.

To reach zero-carbon, existing homes require:

  • Two small-scale vertical axis wind turbines (VAWT) - that spin vertically as similar to a helicopter blade – which is shared between the 27 properties
  • Three 41.4kW ground-source heat pumps between 27 homes
  • A 40kW battery to store excess electricity which can be used during peak periods of demand, shared between 27 homes
  • A 12 cubic metres water-based thermal energy store to save excess heat energy for peak periods, shared between 27 homes
  • 21 photovoltaic solar panels per home to harness up to 2.7 kilowatt (kW) per home per day

Professor Ianakiev, of the School of Architecture, Design and the Built Environment, said: “In urban areas, vertical access wind turbines have low noise emissions and can harness wind energy from any direction, during low and high winds, 24 hours a day, making them particularly useful during the windy winter months.

“To complement these turbines, when the potential for wind energy is reduced during mild summer months, photovoltaic solar cells can harness the energy from the sun during the long daylight hours.

“All the excess electricity can be stored in a large, shared battery which can be drawn on during peak periods, such as during the winter evenings.

“In turn, just three ground-source heat pumps can provide heat energy all year round, with a shared heat store facility available to be drawn on during peak demand.”

The 27 homes in Nottingham, based in Sneinton, were fitted with sustainable energy technology - less the VAWTs - as part of the European-wide Remourban project. The VAWTs were applied to the study virtually.

Professor Ianakiev said: “This study shows what’s required to allow average UK homes to become completely carbon zero. It’s based on combining renewable energy technologies which are already available to buy on the open market today.

“What’s needed, now, is for the retrofitting of this technology to be scaled-up to a national, and for it to be made affordable for consumers, so that the move to net zero can take the necessary steps forward to 2050 when our all-important climate targets must be met.”

The research team included Dr Kevin Naik from the sustainable tech company, Ecolibrium, Dr Ahmad Galadanci of the University of Exeter, Dr Giorgio Cucca (former NTU PhD now with De Blasio Associati), NTU PhD candidate Shubham Shubham and Professor Ming Sun, Associate Dean for Research at NTU’s School of Architecture Design and the Built Environment.

NTU recently invested £1.5 million to launch the Centre for Sustainable Construction and Retrofit to develop solutions, skills and support locally and nationally to enable the transition to net zero within the built environment sector.

Dr Naik, who worked on the study as part of his PhD at Nottingham Trent University, said: “This research presents a pragmatic approach for achieving zero-energy homes by harnessing wind and solar power.

“It has proven that the technologies needed are already available, and when combined, create the critical mass which is required to power homes sustainably from renewable sources to help avert a looming climate catastrophe.”

  • Notes for editors

    Press enquiries please contact Chris Birkle, Public Relations Manager, on telephone +44 (0)115 848 2310, or via email.

    Nottingham Trent University (NTU) has been named UK ‘University of the Year’ five times in six years, (Times Higher Education Awards 2017, The Guardian University Awards 2019, The Times and Sunday Times 2018 and 2023, Whatuni Student Choice Awards 2023) and is consistently one of the top performing modern universities in the UK.

    It is the 3rd best modern university in the UK (The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2023). NTU is the 5th largest UK institution by student numbers, with over 40,000 students and more than 4,400 staff located across five campuses.

    It has an international student population of almost 8,000 and an NTU community representing over 160 countries. NTU owns two Queen’s Anniversary Prizes for outstanding achievements in research (2015, 2021). The first recognises NTU’s research in science, engineering, arts and humanities to investigate and restore cultural objects, buildings and heritage. The second was awarded for research on the safety and security of global citizens.

    The Research Excellence Framework (2021) classed 83% of NTU’s research activity as either world-leading or internationally excellent. 86% of NTU’s research impact was assessed to be either world-leading or internationally excellent. NTU is rated 5/5 stars overall and for Teaching, Employability, Internationalisation, Research and Facilities (QS Stars 2022).

    NTU is a top five university for widening participation with 25% of NTU students coming from disadvantaged backgrounds (HESA 2021-22). It was the first UK university to sign the Social Mobility Pledge in 2018 and was named ‘University of the Year’ at the UK Social Mobility Awards in 2019,  NTU is the most sustainable university in the UK and 2nd in the world (UI Green Metric University World Rankings, 2022).

Published on 24 January 2024
  • Category: Press office; Research; School of Architecture, Design and the Built Environment