Deadline: 9 April 2025
Are you an ambitious business looking to grow or expand in the clean heat sector? They’re looking for Scottish companies that work on heating or energy efficiency in buildings to take part in their 2025 accelerator programme.
Objectives
- The Clean Heat Accelerator will be a training course delivered to a small cohort of businesses involved in clean heat. The Accelerator will help to develop business skills and sector knowledge for participants with the intent to promote business growth and networking in the sector. The aim is to enable job growth and create investment opportunities in participating businesses.
- The Accelerator will support the delivery of the Scottish Government’s Heat in Buildings Strategy.
- Participating businesses will be supported to:
- Develop a commercialisation action plan
- Build business capabilities and sector knowledge
- Create new partnership and/or investment opportunities
- Expand their sector network
Stipend
- Bursary/stipend of £2,000 will be available to all participating businesses to contribute towards costs of participating. Full payment of the stipend will be subject to attendance, and we expect participants to attend at least 80% attendance for the “core” sessions at the start of each week and 60% attendance for the “further learning” sessions at the end of each week.
Time Commitment
- The Accelerator will be delivered as a 16-week programme, spread over 21 weeks accounting for holiday periods, this will include:
- Two virtual sessions per week (1-3 hours per session)
- Three in-person events (6-8 hours per event)
- Individual specialist mentor for each company
- The time requirement will therefore be in the region of 4 hours per week over the 16- weeks. To gain the most benefit from the Accelerator, there will also be elements that can be worked on by participants between sessions to develop commercialisation and growth plans.
Eligibility Criteria
- Businesses must meet specific eligibility requirements in order to join the cohort:
- Companies should be directly involved in clean heat:
- Technologies can include heat pumps, thermal storage, heat networks, solar thermal, biomass, insulation, energy efficiency, deep retrofit, sensors, metering and smart controls.
- Manufacturers, installers, servicing, training or supply chains for clean heat technologies
- There must be a carbon reduction impact from the technology or service
- Small and Medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), i.e. less than 250 staff
- Focus on small and start-up businesses
- Businesses must be a registered company in active operation, i.e. trading and products / services on the market
- Businesses must have the potential and ambition for growth to support the clean heat agenda
- Businesses must be registered or with a material operational base in Scotland and employing staff in Scotland
- Companies should be directly involved in clean heat:
For more information, visit Scottish Enterprise.