The Association for Decentralised Energy
AbbreviationThe ADE
Formation1967
Legal statusNon-profit company
PurposeCombined heat and power, district heating and demand side services in the United Kingdom
Location
  • 6th Floor, 10 Dean Farrar Street, London, SW1H 0DX
Region served
UK
Membership
c. 100 including energy, construction and manufacturing companies, universities and local councils
Director
Ian Calvert
Websitewww.theade.co.uk

The Association for Decentralised Energy (ADE), formerly the Combined Heat and Power Association, is an advocate of an integrated approach to delivering energy locally. The ADE was founded in 1967 as the District Heating Association, becoming the Combined Heat and Power Association in 1983, and was then renamed to the Association for Decentralised Energy on 12 January 2015. The ADE has over 100 members.

The Association merged with the Association for the Conservation of Energy in 2018.[1][2]

The ADE acts as an advocate for its members by engaging with Government and key decision makers to support cost effective and efficient solutions to industry, businesses and householders by:

  • Developing a policy which puts the energy user's needs first
  • Delivering a local, low carbon energy system at lowest cost
  • Ensuring an understanding of heat, which makes up half of our energy use
  • Taking an integrated and 'systems thinking' approach
  • Helping users manage energy demand to limit the need for new generation capacity
  • Strengthening the sector's reputation through industry standards and best practice

The Association also provide secretariat for the Independent Heat Customer Protection Scheme.

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.