º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Professional Services

Development Bank of Wales with added firepower to help firms decarbonise

Its Green Business Loan Scheme funding has been increased by the Welsh Government to £20m

Left to right :Tim Harper, Thorncliffe Building Supplies; the firm's dog Bear and Scott Hughes, Development Bank of Wales.(Image: Ginger Pixie Photography)

The Development Bank of Wales has secured £10m of additional funding from the Welsh Government to help firms decarbonise .

Its Green Business Loan Scheme, launched in 2023, is now being extended to £20m with funding available until 2028. To date over 30 Welsh businesses have benefitted from tailored support through the scheme, delivering forecasted carbon savings of more than 28,000 tonnes over the lifetime of their projects.

This includes a loan of £3.2m for Mold-based Thorncliffe Building Supplies to invest in a new wash plant and water treatment system that will reduce the company’s use of landfill.

As one of the largest independent builder’s merchants in north Wales, Thorncliffe Building Supplies provides an extensive range of building, timber, steel, plumbing and heating supplies, and plant hire, along with a waste management and skip hire service. With five sites in Dyserth, Ewloe, Rhuddlan, Wrexham and Abergele.

The company is owned and managed by husband and wife duo Deborah and Tim Harper. Established in 1987, the company now employs 265.

Managing director Tim Harper said: “We are constantly evolving as a business to diversify and strengthen our customer offering while remaining compliant with regulatory and legislative requirements.

“Reducing waste and cutting our carbon emissions is a key priority for us hence our decision to invest in a new washing plant. This will allow us to process our construction waste and sub-soil on-site rather than use landfill. The facility will wash and sort the waste into different grades of aggregates that can then be re-sold so it’s a win-win all round.”

The development bank is wholly-owned by the Welsh Government