Royal estate installs Remeha biomass boiler

Boilers, Remeha, wood chip, wood pellet, biomass
The installation of a Remeha Commercial biomass boiler at the Duchy of Cornwall Nursery to replace oil-fire equipment is part of the plan to reduce the carbon footprint by 70%.

Replacing an oil-fired heating system with a biomass boiler from Remeha Commercial is the latest initiative in the campaign to reduce the carbon footprint of the Duchy of Cornwall Nursery at Lostwithiel in Cornwall. This 100 kW boiler serves the newly opened visitors’ centre, shop and cafe building and the new greenhouse area.

The boiler is fuelled by locally sourced wood pellets, and sufficient stock is held to meet demand for at least 21 days in Winter to minimise fuel deliveries.

Remeha has also supplied a day hopper in the boiler house to give the option to load 10 kg bags of pellets manually should adverse weather prevent delivery. A pallet of pellets is stored near the boiler house.

This project is the third between Remeha Commercial and the Duchy of Cornwall. The others were a 360 kW wood-chip boiler at Restormel Manor in 2008 and a 30 kW wood-pellet boiler in Tor Gate, a restored farmhouse on Dartmoor.

For more information on this story, click here: September 2011, 102
Related links:
Related articles:



modbs tv logo

Industry leaders gather at CIBSE’s Measuring Performance and Facilities Management conference

CIBSE’s Measuring Performance and Facilities Management conference recently brought together leading voices from across the built environment
to explore the evolving landscape of building performance and operational excellence.

Independent testing crucial to bridge retrofit confidence gap, BSRIA study reveals

New research from the Building Services Research and Intelligence Association (BSRIA) highlights a significant confidence gap between construction professionals and the general public regarding the effectiveness of building retrofits.