Friday, September 26, 2025

Bodycote achieves zero-emission operations at UK plants

Bodycote has achieved zero operational carbon emissions at its Derby and Rotherham facilities, marking a significant milestone in industrial decarbonization for the heat treatment sector. Both plants, which focus on heat treating turbine blades for Rolls-Royce engines, now operate fully on renewable electricity and no longer rely on fossil fuels. The transition has been completed without carbon offsetting.

The move positions Bodycote as the first major heat treatment provider to demonstrate near-term, measurable carbon reduction across critical manufacturing processes. The company’s global network, spanning over 100 sites, is pursuing energy efficiency improvements, electrification, on-site renewable energy, nitrogen gas generation, hydrogen electrolysis, and green methanol sourcing.

Innovations at the Derby site include a closed-circuit adiabatic cooling system that reduces electricity use by 73%, lowers water consumption by more than 85%, and eliminates chemical cleaning requirements. The facilities now serve as blueprint sites for a broader global decarbonisation programme, with further zero-emission sites expected to be announced.

Bodycote reports that energy intensity across its operations has dropped 27% since 2019, while associated carbon emissions have fallen by 29%. The company aims to achieve a 46% reduction in operational emissions by 2030. Customers can access lower-carbon heat treatment services without increased costs, extended lead times, or reduced capacity, with process emissions reductions of up to 60% demonstrated in specific scenarios.

The initiative aligns with UK industrial decarbonisation priorities, supporting regional low-carbon manufacturing networks and national climate targets.

A message from the Editor:

Thank you for reading this story on our news site - please take a moment to read this important message:

As you know, our aim is to bring you, the reader, an editorially led news site and magazine but journalism costs money and we rely on advertising, print and digital revenues to help to support them.

With the Covid-19 pandemic having a major impact on our industry as a whole, the advertising revenues we normally receive, which helps us cover the cost of our journalists and this website, have been drastically affected.

As such we need your help. If you can support our news sites/magazines with either a small donation of even £1, or a subscription to our magazine, which costs just £33.60 per year, (inc p&P and mailed direct to your door) your generosity will help us weather the storm and continue in our quest to deliver quality journalism.

As a subscriber, you will have unlimited access to our web site and magazine. You'll also be offered VIP invitations to our events, preferential rates to all our awards and get access to exclusive newsletters and content.

Just click here to subscribe and in the meantime may I wish you the very best.












Latest news

Related news

By continuing to use the site, you agree to the use of cookies. more information

The cookie settings on this website are set to "allow cookies" to give you the best browsing experience possible. If you continue to use this website without changing your cookie settings or you click "Accept" below then you are consenting to this.

Close