Pioneering Rochdale manufacturer wins rare Queen’s Award for Enterprise for Sustainable Development
Date published: 29 April 2021
Richard Hagan, managing director of Crystal Doors
Rochdale manufacturer Crystal Doors, which has completely transformed its factory in response to the climate emergency, is one of just 17 organisations to be honoured with a Queen’s Award for Enterprise for Sustainable Development ahead of the COP26 climate summit in November.
Crystal Doors manufactures vinyl-wrapped doors and components for kitchens, bedrooms and bathrooms, employing 34 people.
The company has been recognised with the prestigious national award after pioneering an innovative approach to achieving net zero manufacturing.
A radical cashflow neutral sustainability programme – featuring smart autonomous machinery, energy efficient technologies, solar panels, electric vehicles, carbon literacy training and biomass heating fuelled by the factory’s own waste – has reduced Crystal Doors’ direct carbon footprint by nearly 80% in just than five years.
The measures are also saving nearly £200,000 a year in energy and material savings, showing that it is both possible and desirable for businesses to take action on their climate impact.
Managing Director Richard Hagan, who first recognised the need to act after environmental concerns nearly closed the factory in 2015, said: “The science says we only have a few years of inaction left before achieving our global agreements on greenhouse gas emissions become impossible. This is our collective responsibility as businesses, and we want to show that even smaller organisations with tight purse strings can play their part.”
The Queen’s Awards for Enterprise, established in 1965, are the most prestigious business awards in the UK. Winning businesses are able to use the esteemed Queen’s Awards emblem for the next five years.
Only 29 companies in the North of England have been recognised in the Sustainable Development category since it was first introduced in 2000. Crystal Doors is the first business in Rochdale to win the award.
“We’re proud of our industrial heritage here in Rochdale and the wider North,” Richard added. “It’s even more important we kickstart the transition to a green economy in economically deprived areas like ours, where we can create high quality green jobs for local communities.”
Rochdale MP, Tony Lloyd said: “Rochdale has set an ambitious target to be carbon neutral by 2038, far ahead of the UK’s 2050 target. If the government puts the right policies in place, the North of England has enormous potential to use its industrial expertise to drive a green industrial revolution and green recovery in the UK.
“Congratulations to Richard and Crystal Doors for their well-deserved Queen’s Award win and for showing us all what’s possible.”
Crystal Doors is now planning to reach full carbon neutrality across its entire supply chain in time for the UN COP26 climate summit in Glasgow in November, partly by ending work with companies that have not committed to net zero themselves.
The Queen’s Awards are the highest any business in the UK can receive and the winners are traditionally announced on the Queen’s birthday, 21 April, but were delayed slightly this year due to the death of Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh.
They are given for outstanding achievement in the categories of innovation, international trade, sustainable development and promoting opportunity through social mobility.
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