Our Operations teams, covering Estates, IT Services, Procurement, and Commercial Services, manage and reduce our energy, emissions, water consumption and waste production.
Our Estates Department also looks after our 135-acre parkland estate, which includes a variety of habitats and streams and a rich plethora of flora and fauna species - check out our Living Studio for more information.
We’re embedding sustainability into everything we do, from designing new buildings to purchasing appliances, selecting cleaning contractors, and sourcing kitchen ingredients. Notable initiatives already in place include:
- 100% zero-carbon electricity supply
- Zero-waste-to-landfill
- 4x solar panel (PV cell) arrays
- Rolling LED light installation programme
- Majority electrically powered fleet
- On-site electric vehicle charging points and bike storage facilities
- Regular campus bus service linking offsite accommodation and train station
- Chemical free cleaning
- 3-star Sustainable Restaurant Award
- Reduced meat menus with emphasis on plant-based meals
- Fossil fuel divestment from our endowment investment portfolio
- Charitable donation of old IT equipment, clothes and other goods
Further information
Decarbonising our estate
Our greatest challenge will be decarbonising our Estate in line with our 2035 and 2040 net zero commitments.
Whilst we’ve been continuously improving the energy efficiency of our buildings, switching to sensor-operated LED lights, and prioritising sustainability in construction projects like Chestnuts, we still need to replace remaining gas boilers with heat pumps and single-glazed windows with double and triple glazing. This long-term programme, estimated at £50-100m over 10-20 years, includes our heritage Grade-1 listed Founder’s Building, which is subject to much stricter planning laws and regulations and will require lots of existing innovation to succeed.
To shape our 10–20-year investment plan and to aid transparency, we’ve established an Environmental Footprint Database of all our energy consumption, emissions, waste production and water use. From 2023/24 we'll begin annually publishing this information alongside our Financial Statements.
Commerical services
The Sustainable Restaurant Association’s (SRA) Food Made Good Standard is the hospitality sector’s leading sustainability certification. Awarded to food and beverage businesses meeting criteria in sourcing, society and environment, it’s a respected standard customers and stakeholders can trust.
In July 2022, Royal Holloway’s Commercial Services achieved a 3-star rating – the highest possible achievement.
The University was commended by the SRA for its sustainability initiatives and commitment to ethical best practices. High scores were achieved, notably in feeding people well (91%), wasting no food (89%) and supporting global farmers (85%).
Procurement
As a member of the London Universities Purchasing Consortium, Royal Holloway prioritises responsible procurement.
Our suppliers must adhere to our Supply Code of Conduct, which covers:
- Social compliance, prohibiting forced or underage labour, ensuring suitable working conditions and fair treatment of workers.
- Ethical compliance and economic development, including acting with integrity, complying with laws and regulations, and supporting of fair trade.
- Environmental compliance, including avoiding environmental harm and taking actions to reduce environmental impact.
As a leader in this field, we’re also an affiliate of Electronics Watch, an independent monitoring organisation collaborating with public sector organisations to promote and enable responsible procurement and safeguard workers’ rights in electronic supply chains.
On-site renewable energy generation
In addition to our zero-carbon electricity supply and ongoing energy-saving efforts, we operate four rooftop solar arrays. Our two largest systems are installed on the newest editions to our estate – the Shilling and Emily Wilding Davidson buildings.
With a combined maximum capacity of over 100kWh, these systems power their respective buildings, and export excess generation to the National Grid.
On-site renewable energy generation will continue to be integral to our decarbonisation strategy, and we’re currently exploring funding and considering locations for additional systems across the campus.
Building | Shilling | Emily Wilding Davidson | Caryl Churchill | Moore |
No. of Solar Modules | 152 | 150 | 40 | 27 |
Capacity (kW) | 41.8 | 45 | 12 | 6.6 |
Inverter | Solis 40kW | 2x ZeverSolar 17K | Fronius IG Plus | 3x Sunnyboy 2000HF |
Annual Estimated Generation (kWh) | 37,994 | 40,050 | 10,000 | 8,000 |
Electric vehicles (EVs)
Most of our campus fleet runs on electric power, charged with zero-carbon energy on-site. This includes 13 electric buggies used by our maintenance teams, our gardening team’s electric vehicle, and our clean-air postal van.
In addition to cutting our scope 1 carbon emissions, our electric vehicles (EVs) help keep air pollution low around campus, saving fuel costs, and minimising noise pollution near offices, lecture theatres and halls of residence.
Mike Berry, Director of Estates, said: “Reducing our fleet and transitioning what remains to EVs is a vital part of our sustainability strategy and way of reducing our overall environmental footprint.”
“It’s also making more and more sense operationally and, after some initial reluctance, you can see that the teams are now genuinely enjoying and proud to be using the buggies and vans and doing their bit."
“They’re a great symbol to our students and visitors that we’re taking our role seriously.”
We still have more work to do, aiming to phase out or replace the few remaining fuel vehicles, decrease the overall fleet size, and advance our wider Green Travel Plan and initiatives.