Net Zero Carbon

Katy Purvis - Net Zero Carbon Project Officer
Katy is our Net Zero Carbon Project Officer. Her job is to develop and drive the Diocesan Net Zero Carbon Action Plan so that we meet the Church of England target of Net Zero by 2030. This involves finding ways to reduce emissions in the areas over which the Diocese has direct control; clergy housing, Diocesan offices and staff travel. It is also about providing support to areas which the Diocese has influence but no direct control, such as churches, parish property, schools, the Cathedral and Emmanuel Theological College.
M: 07752 798148 E: katy.purvis@chester.anglican.org

The Church of England defines Net Zero Carbon as the reduction as far as possible of all in-scope carbon emissions. The in-scope emmisions are the oil, gas and electricity we use in our buildings together with petrol and diesel transport. It is the removal of an equivalent amount of carbon from the atmosphere for the remaining in-scope emissions by use of accredited offsetting schemes.
Picturing a tonne of Carbon

Net Zero Carbon Routemap Scope



By the end of 2023
10%^ of local churches in every diocese to be registered for Eco Church and 5% to be awarded at least a Bronze Eco Church award. - Acheived 32% registered and 19% awarded at least Bronze by December 2023
Every Diocese to have a 90%+ completion rate for the Energy Foot Print Tool. The Energy Footprint Tool can be accessed through the Parish Returns Portal - Achieved 65% completion rate by December 2023
By the end of 2024
At the point of contract renewal, switch to 100% green electricity tariff. If you still have gas heating after having reviewed options to replace fossil fuels, switch to a green gas tariff at the point of contract renewal, based on national advice about the criteria to apply. Timing of this milestone to be kept under review, depending on stabilisation of the energy markets and / or government action.
By the end of 2025
All churches to have energy-efficient lighting installed throughout, with timers and light and motion sensors where appropriate.
No new oil boilers installed in churches after this date, subject to government action to connect rural communities to the grid.
For those churches that are tourist destinations, review opportunities to install electric charging for coaches.
By the end of 2026
40% of local churches in every diocese to be registered with Eco Church, 30% of these to have an award and at least a third of these to be awarded Silver Eco Church award or higher (at Jan 2024 31% of churches registered of which 34% have secured awards, 4% of them Silver or higher).
By the end of 2027
From 2022, the top 20% of energy-consuming churches in each diocese to begin to develop a Net Zero Carbon Action Plan, to be finalised no later than 2027. These plans should include, as a minimum: low-carbon heating options to replace fossil-fuel heating at end-of-life, such as heat pumps or far infra-red heating panels; a Heating Resilience Plan which should consider how to manage heat should the existing system fail, to avoid needing a quick like-for-like fossil-fuel replacement
By the end of 2030
Complete all actions in your Net Zero Carbon Action Plan