Shropshire Star

£207,000 grants lifeline to help Telford community groups with rising cost of energy

Telford community groups struggling with soaring energy bills have been handed grants totalling more than £200,000 by the borough's council.

Published
Park Lane Centre in Woodside

Local community centres have been thrown a lifeline thanks to the grants announced by Telford & Wrekin Council.

The grants of up to £10,000, which have been awarded to 26 local charities, schools, organisations and businesses, total £207,000 and come from the council’s Climate Change Fund, established to help the community carry out projects to reduce the borough’s carbon footprint.

Organisations set to benefit from this money include a number of community centres across the borough, which plan to use their grant to install energy-efficient heating systems or switch to energy-saving lighting, enabling them to reduce energy bills.

Park Lane Centre in Woodside is one grant beneficiary which has been struggling with rising energy costs, leading to concerns about the future of the charity.

Jacqui Idiens from Park Lane Centre said: "I’m absolutely thrilled we’re getting this money from the council’s Climate Change Fund. We’re going to replace all our lighting with energy-efficient LEDs which we estimate will reduce our emissions by 1.76 tonnes CO2e and save us more than £1k per year in fuel bills.

"As a charity, we have been struggling with the costs of energy, and although we have managed to cope to date, we have serious concerns about viability going forwards.

"Our centre is used by hundreds of people on a daily and weekly basis attending the groups that take place here, from Knit & Knatter to Making Changes Youth Club.

"We’ve also just signed up to be a Warm and Welcoming Space for local people as part of the council’s cost of living support initiative.

"Our community relies on our venue, so this funding is a game changer – it means we won’t have to close our doors and all these hugely valuable activities can carry on."

Telford & Wrekin Council received 34 applications for its 2022 round of Climate Change Fund grants, which offered up to £10,000 to organisations looking to deliver projects that contribute to the council’s goal of reducing the borough’s carbon footprint to net zero by 2030.

The 26 successful applications covered a variety of carbon-reducing actions, including supporting sustainable travel, delivering energy efficiencies to premises and reducing waste.

Many of the organisations intend to use their funds to switch to energy-saving LED lighting, while others plan to install community EV charging points, solar panels, sustainable heating systems or recycling bins.

Grants were also awarded to organisations looking to promote ‘grow local’ food as well as those delivering awareness through carbon literacy.

Councillor Carolyn Healy said: “Thanks to match funding, our total £207,000 of climate grants awarded to these organisations will enable more than £770,000 of carbon-reducing projects to take place across the borough.

"This is a significant amount of work and we’re very excited to see the emissions reductions that will follow as a direct result.

"Even better, much of this money will be fed back into the local economy through the use of local energy efficiency suppliers.

"Beyond the hugely worthwhile carbon savings, I am so pleased that these grants are also offering many local organisations tangible cost savings on their energy bills too.

"These centres are the lifeblood of our community so I’m delighted we’ve been able to support them and their users.”