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Businesses share £7.2m in grants to boost decarbonisation

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The grants have been awarded to nine businesses (Jane Barlow/PA)
The grants have been awarded to nine businesses (Jane Barlow/PA)

Scottish businesses are to share £7.2 million in grants for energy-saving projects.

The Scottish Government’s Scottish Industrial Energy Transformation Fund (SIETF) aims to help businesses reduce carbon emissions from manufacturing.

The latest round of funding has been awarded to nine businesses, including food and drink manufacturers and timber pallet processing, and the Government said it has leveraged private funding to reach a total of £19 million of investment.

First Minister John Swinney visited Chivas Brothers Strathclyde Distillery in Glasgow, which produces grain whisky for Chival Regal and Ballantine’s, to mark the latest funding round.

He viewed the firm’s mechanical vapour recompression technology, which was supported by a £3.1 million grant from the SIETF.

John Swinney in suit walking through corridor at Holyrood
First Minister John Swinney hailed the funding (Jane Barlow/PA)

The company hopes the new technology will allow it to reduce energy usage by more than 46,000 megawatt hours per year – equivalent to the energy needed to power 17,000 homes a year.

The First Minister said: “Growing the economy and tackling the climate emergency are two of my priorities in Government.

“Projects like the one at the Strathclyde Distillery will be essential in helping us meet our climate change ambitions and promote sustainable economic growth across Scotland – by supporting our existing energy-intensive sectors and attracting the manufacturing industries of the future.

“With an average ratio of £1 of public to £1.75 of private funds, the SIETF has been incredibly successful in leveraging investment across industrial sites to accelerate adoption of low-carbon, energy efficient technologies.

“The fund also delivers business benefits through energy-related manufacturing savings.

“The SIETF demonstrates how government and industry are taking steps together to deliver against climate change plan targets by co-investing to decarbonise the industrial sites that local jobs and communities depend upon.

Silhouette of a man holding up a dram of whisky
The whisky industry said it is working to decarbonise (Danny Lawson/PA)

“We will continue to work closely with industrial sectors to support the progression of projects to decarbonise Scottish manufacturing.”

Production director at Chivas Brothers Brian MacAulay said: “This grant from the Scottish Government via SIETF validates our approach to decarbonisation and our commitment to shaping the future of sustainable Scotch.

“It is only by embracing innovative solutions and working together with specialist partners like GEA Wiegand that we can reduce our environmental impact, while also ensuring the longevity and resilience of the Scotch whisky industry for generations to come.”

Mark Kent, chief executive of the Scotch Whisky Association, said: “How the Scotch whisky industry will achieve emissions reduction will be as diverse as our distilleries and locations.

“Each site will have different challenges, but through support from the Scottish Government with grants like SIETF, distilleries can accelerate decarbonisation in their own operations towards our shared industry goal of 2040.

“As an industry with a strong track record delivering environmental improvement, we are determined to achieve net zero emissions in our own operations and supply chains as fast as possible.

“Innovation, collaboration and an enabling policy framework will enable us to continue to celebrate and produce Scotch whisky for the long term.”

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