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Four key takeaways from the Festival of Sustainable Business

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By Liam Coleman
24 Jun 2025

This year鈥檚 brought together changemakers, innovators and purpose-driven organisations from across southwest England 鈥� and the message was clear: sustainability is no longer just a goal; it鈥檚 the engine of future growth.听

As the event鈥檚 Headline & Innovation Partner we were on the ground at the recently retrofitted Bristol Beacon, and these were four of the many key takeaways from the event.

FOSB #2

1. Retrofit: A Must-Do, Not a Nice-to-Have

With 348 solar panels on its roof, saving the venue nearly 23 tonnes of carbon a year, the Bristol Beacon was a fitting venue for this year鈥檚 Festival, where talk about the importance of retrofitting was front and centre. As green thought leader Benita Matofska noted in the event鈥檚 Opening Ceremony: 鈥淚t's no accident, of course, that we are here at the fabulous Bristol Beacon. It's ."

But it鈥檚 not just headline venues that can make a difference. Businesses of all sizes can take action 鈥� and see results. From installing solar panels to optimising heating systems, even modest interventions can lead to significant energy savings.听

Jack Allen from Building Energy Experts summed it up: retrofitting isn鈥檛 one-size-fits-all. 鈥淓verybody's different and everything is different. 皇冠体育app need to understand exactly what the building is to really understand how it's currently being used and specify the best plan going forward,鈥� he told the Conference.听

Just ask Sam Walker, who鈥檚 transformed his Victorian department store, 皇冠体育appston-Super-Mare鈥檚 Walker & Ling, with support from North Somerset Council and Future Leap. 鈥淟ots of gaps and lots of cold air coming in鈥� gave way to 57 solar panels and a huge drop in energy use.听

2. Collaboration is the Catalyst

If we want to move fast, we need to move together. Whether it鈥檚 building EV infrastructure or embedding renewables, collaboration is key.听

Ed Rowberry of BBRC shared how the Green Growth Fund, launching this autumn, will provide large-scale investment to help businesses grow their green ambitions. 鈥淭he opportunity is there. If you've got a business and you want to grow, the financing should be there. It's just about navigating it.鈥澨�

But collaboration goes beyond funding. It鈥檚 about scrutinising your whole supply chain. Paul Bowtell is the Senior Manager for Sustainability at the Green Britain Group, which incorporates us at Ecotricity. He told delegates: 鈥淲here you spend your money is really important. Spending money is a massive sign, so just have a look at your suppliers. Are they on the same page? Have they got some targets? Are they trying to get there? They don't have to be perfect, but are they at least trying?鈥澨�

Small steps count. George Boyd of encouraged businesses to engage suppliers early, break down Scope 3 emissions into bite-sized chunks, and make sure everyone in the chain is pulling in the same direction. He added that the agency offers a scorecard assessment tool for businesses to check their progress.听

FOSB #3

3. Data is Power

Once you have engaged those suppliers, that then gives you the most important thing for building a decarbonisation map. Good intentions are one thing; good data is what turns plans into action.听

Understanding your energy use is an important first step. Alex Benstead from the UK Green Building Council, for which Ecotricity is the only Energy Supplier Member, stressed the power of smart and half-hourly meters in helping businesses get to grips with usage patterns. 鈥淏e curious about your energy usage and what that data tells you.鈥澨�

Away from the main Conference talks, there were interactive workshops and sessions taking place throughout Bristol Beacon. In one session, Practical steps for Decarbonisation, George Boyd shared how one Bristol client was able to cut their building emissions by 40% 鈥� thanks to data-driven planning that prioritised carbon impact and return on investment. He added that the way to do this was by identifying all possible carbon reductions across operations and then find the timescale, implementation cost and carbon impact for each one; this can then be a way of devising the most effective steps any business can take.听

And as Tracy Wyman from the Science Based Targets Initiative reminded attendees: 鈥淎 strong plan includes a clear path to reduce emissions, clarity on capital investment and governance structures to achieve your plan and supplier and value chain investment.鈥澨�

The message? Your baseline doesn鈥檛 have to be perfect 鈥� but starting to measure is what puts you on the path to change.听

4. Small, but Everywhere

In the push for decarbonisation, not every solution needs to be huge. In fact, the most exciting changes are happening at small scale all over the UK.听

Helen Martin from Bristol Energy Cooperative called this 鈥渟mall but everywhere鈥�. On-site generation, like solar panels, small wind, battery storage, reduces grid strain, cuts carbon and pays for itself over time.听

Emily Taylor from National Grid pointed to the rising demand: connection requests have tripled as more businesses move towards low-carbon technologies.听

And at Ecotricity, we couldn鈥檛 agree more. As George Dale from our team, which has installed solar panels for the likes of Ford and Sainsbury鈥檚, said: 鈥溁使谔逵齛pp want to turn every business park into a power station.鈥� That鈥檚 the power of local energy.听

From retrofit projects to data-led decisions, from collaboration to decentralised generation 鈥� the festival made it clear that the southwest isn鈥檛 just talking about sustainability. It鈥檚 building it. One building, one business, one bold idea at a time.听

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