As a Cornish manufacturer and nationwide delivery partner of ground source heat pumps, Kensa Contracting has now expanded into Scotland with the appointment of Matthew Black, a Scottish community heating specialist in Glasgow.
Kensa Contracting specialises in the large scale installation of Cornish-manufactured Kensa ground source heat pumps and are famed for award-winning retrofit installations, from tower blocks to rural communities.
Kensa, a Cornish word meaning ‘first’, are the pioneers of ‘shared ground loop arrays’, a form of district heating which provides each home with its own ground source heat pump offering complete control and lower bills, whilst connected to a communal ambient temperature pipework infrastructure delivering ultra-efficient and low-carbon heating with no heat losses.
The deployment of ground source heat pumps is particularly effective at alleviating fuel poverty in rural areas. Kensa’s nationwide experience of shared ground loop array deployment will be enhanced by Matthew’s 10 years of delivering community energy schemes to decarbonise Scottish communities through innovative low carbon heat and smart grid projects. Matthew will be well known to some through his previous role at Fintry Development Trust.
Matthew comments:
Shared ground loop arrays are the most effective solution for delivering Scotland’s ambitions for the decarbonisation of heat. Along with the right policy changes in Scotland, we can make significant progress towards Scotland’s 2045 net-zero carbon target and beyond. The race to decarbonise electricity in Scotland has made considerable progress. The race to decarbonise heat and transport is on!
Currently celebrating our 20th year, Kensa’s ground source heat pumps provide heating to a number of sites across Scotland, notably Orkney Islands Council’s multi-purpose facility in Stromness, heated using the sea, and the first and most northerly ground source installations in Unst, Shetlands.