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  3. Bilton C of E Junior School

Talk to the caretaker about turning off the heating and hot water in the school holidays

Bilton C of E Junior School, Tuesday, 25 February 2025
30 Communicator KS1, KS2, KS3, KS4, KS5

What you did

Our headteacher told us that the heating had been on in school during the half term holiday.  We looked at the gas data and could see that it had cost of £180.79 during the week.  
In our eco-club meeting we emailed our caretaker and asked him to review the settings for the boiler.  As he is new to the job, he talked to the engineers when they came to check the school boiler and he found out how to set the timings and how to set the temperature.  
As as result, our gas is now set to be turned off during holidays and the classroom temperatures around school have been reduced to 18.5 degrees.  We are planning to use classroom thermometers to check that this is working correctly.

Activity description


Most schools currently use over 50% of their energy consumption out of school hours, in the evenings, weekends and school holidays.  Arrange an interview with the caretaker or building manager to improve heating controls to cut waste during these times.

Generally, schools consume energy for heating out of hours for 3 reasons:

  1. Overly pessimistic or faulty frost protection. It is recommended that frost protection settings at all schools are reviewed reducing weekend and holiday demand. Depending on school's insulation levels, an internal setting of 8C is recommended with an outside temperature setting of 4°C where relevant. 
  2. They lack a 7 day timer, so it is not possible to turn the heating/hot water off at weekends. Many schools still have 24 hours timers for boilers, storage radiators or hot water heaters. This means they are using 14% more energy than necessary. Another common problem is that after power cuts these timers often get out of sync with real-time, and are not corrected. It is recommended that all 24 hours timers are replaced with 7 day timers and that the settings of these timers are reviewed at least once per year to ensure that have not become out of sync as a result of power cuts or accidental adjustments. 
  3. Mis-configured boiler settings. Remember to reset controls to their normal positions after special evening or weekend use.

Approximately, 17% of energy is used in the school holidays. This is a combination of:

  1. Frost protection (as above)
  2. Heating left on for legitimate reasons, but generally only for partial occupancy for 1 or 2 staff members. Where zone controls are fitted only heat those zones that are occupied and need heating in the school holidays. Consider using electric fan heaters for offices occupied in the school holidays rather than heating the whole school. 
  3. Heating left on accidentally, because staff don't know how to work the controls, or forget to switch  it off. Many school boiler controllers allow the programming of a year's worth of holidays in advance. Where possible this should be programmed at the start of the school year. Otherwise, ask your caretaker to switch off heating manually, except frost protection, at the end of term.
  4. Hot water heating left running. Ask your caretaker to switch off your hot water boilers or tanks. They may need to remember to check in toilets, kitchens, and washing-up areas for individual hot water tanks if you don't have a centralised hot water system.

Make sure you follow up on any actions agreed and check the Energy Sparks data for your school to see if they have helped to cut energy use.

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