The Aqualibrium in Argyll and Bute A swimming pool in Argyll & Bute is at the forefront of a renewable energy revolution which creates heat from waste water.
Scottish Water Horizons
(from left) Paul Kerr – Scottish Water Horizons, Alan P Scott – Scottish Water, Russ Burton – SHARC Energy Systems SHARC Energy Systems has joined forces with Scottish Water Horizons to establish a joint venture which will enable them to expand and accelerate the deployment of wastewater heat
Stirling Council, alongside partner Scottish Water Horizons, has been awarded £100,000 to explore a pioneering heat solution for rural Stirling, with initial feasibility being carried out in Callander. The first study of its kind in the UK, the project will investigate how waste heat extracted from
Scotland’s sewers contain enough natural and discarded heat to warm a city the size of Glasgow for more than four months a year, according to a new report. Figures produced by Scottish Water Horizons for renewable energy group Scottish Renewables, have revealed that 921 million litres of wastewate