THE Green Home Festival is set to return to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe this year, featuring a range of topics including building greener kitchens, accessing renewable funding, and preventing heat loss through windows and doors.
Air source heat pumps, effective insulation and electric vehicles (EVs) will also be on the agenda at the second five-day event, which is organised by the Construction Industry Collective Voice (CICV).
Running from 14-18 August and delivered via a mix of in-person and virtual presentations, the festival will deliver practical assistance and advice to help Scotland become a net zero nation.
CICV organisers revealed they have followed up on the success of last year’s inaugural event with another line-up of topical talking points, including:
- Garden rooms and garden offices
- Practical consumer guidance on heat pumps
- Efficient use of gas central heating
- Hybrid heating and boiler types
- Converting disused buildings into smart homes
- Insulation and fabric of buildings in domestic retrofitting
- The future of low-carbon heating technologies, such as microwave
- Webinars on retrofit skills and heat programmes
- Solar panels, including battery storage options.
One of the CICV organisers, John McKinney, secretary of the National Federation of Roofing Contractors, said, “Last year’s inaugural Green Home Festival delivered a wealth of demonstrations and hands-on guidance about efficient use of energy and smart interaction with the built environment.
“As we all try to minimise carbon emissions and do our best to mitigate the effects of the cost-of-living crisis, it is likely that interest this year will be even greater, and the proposed programme is designed to have a greater focus on consumers and practical domestic advice.
“The construction industry has demonstrated unprecedented levels of co-operation in the common interest in recent years and this festival will once again illustrate that it can work together with the public to help build a greener Scotland for everyone.”
Presenters will include experts from the CICV and other organisations including the Architects Climate Action Network, Edinburgh University, BE-ST, and the Energy Savings Trust, with venues, dates and booking details to be revealed later this year.
Co-organiser Gordon Nelson, Scotland director of the Federation of Master Builders, added, “Representatives from across the construction industry in Scotland have once again been working hard to put together a programme for the festival which is relevant to a wide audience and of real practical value to consumers.
“There is a tangible feeling that the will to act is now there in the broad mass of companies, organisations and individuals who want to reduce their carbon footprint and become more energy efficient.
“As the agenda firms up and the festival begins to take shape over the coming months, we expect that its professional perspective and focus on a more sustainable and healthier environment will attract a wide audience from Scotland and beyond.”