Utilita expands HQ circularity and on-site renewables pilots

Utilita expands HQ circularity and on-site renewables pilots

Utilita is extending decarbonisation work at its headquarters. Composting, rainwater harvesting, and a possible small-wind installation are being assessed as the supplier sharpens its operational net-zero programme ahead of Global Recycling Day.


IN Brief:

  • Utilita is using its Hutwood Court headquarters as a live test bed for operational decarbonisation ahead of Global Recycling Day on 18 March.
  • The programme combines food-waste composting with proposed rainwater harvesting and a feasibility study for small vertical-axis wind turbines.
  • The work extends a wider operational net-zero plan that already centres heavily on Hutwood Court’s building emissions profile.

Utilita Energy is expanding a new round of circularity and building-efficiency measures at its Hutwood Court headquarters ahead of Global Recycling Day on 18 March, combining food-waste composting with planned water-saving and renewable energy projects at the site.

The supplier said all food waste generated by staff at the building over the past year is now being diverted from landfill through on-site composting systems. Early batches are also being assessed for a mushroom-growing pilot, which would use compost produced at the site to grow fresh produce for colleagues.

The next phase of the programme moves beyond waste handling and into building services. Utilita is preparing a rainwater harvesting system designed to collect and store runoff for toilet flushing, reducing demand for mains water at the headquarters. It is also assessing whether small vertical-axis wind turbines could supply part of the building’s electricity demand.

The projects sit within a broader operational decarbonisation programme at Utilita, which says its own operations are targeting net zero by 2030. Hutwood Court remains the company’s biggest single building focus: Utilita’s 2022/23 carbon footprint report said the headquarters accounted for 66% of emissions from its buildings portfolio, underscoring why site-level efficiency and generation measures are being prioritised there.

The combination of waste diversion, water reuse, and small-scale on-site generation reflects a broader push across commercial buildings to cut operating emissions, reduce utility demand, and strengthen site resilience. Further details on the company’s wider programme are available via Utilita’s sustainability page.


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