How UK Schools Can Power Their Net-Zero Journey in 2026
Solar PV, LED lighting, battery storage and future-ready heat pumps are helping schools cut costs, reduce carbon and create living classrooms for sustainability education.
Rising energy costs, climate resilience needs and national targets are pushing estates teams to act decisively. The good news is that proven, scalable solutions already exist — starting with rooftop solar PV, smartly paired with LED lighting upgrades, battery storage and future-ready heat pumps.
Schools with large daytime energy loads are ideally positioned to generate clean power on-site, slash bills, cut carbon and create living classrooms for sustainability education.
In this in-depth editorial for The School Network, we explore the latest 2026 landscape, the most discussed opportunities and challenges, DfE priorities around carbon reduction, the Condition Improvement Fund, and complementary building improvements.
DfE’s 2026 Push: Policy, Targets and Estate Renewal
The DfE’s refreshed Education Estates Strategy, published in February 2026, sets out a “decade of national renewal”. For school leaders, the key priorities include:
The estate’s 55 million square metres of roof space offers huge potential, with an estimated 0.8–1.9 GW of additional solar capacity. A typical school could save up to £25,000 annually with solar panels plus complementary technologies such as batteries.
Solar PV for Schools: Why It Works
- Daytime alignment: Schools use most electricity during daylight hours in term time, creating excellent self-consumption rates and strong ROI.
- Payback: Typical payback is 5–7 years, often faster with export tariffs and battery storage.
- Savings and carbon impact: Average annual bill reductions can range from £5,000 to £25,000 per site.
- Educational value: Real-time monitoring dashboards turn roofs into living science labs.
Early 2025–26 Great British Energy projects already show strong results, with pioneer schools collectively saving significant sums annually and multi-site trusts reporting major long-term net savings.
Common Challenges in 2026
Funding Routes in 2026
- Great British Energy / Net Zero Accelerator grants: Direct capital support for solar and efficiency bundles.
- Salix Finance / Public Sector Decarbonisation Scheme: Support for heat decarbonisation and efficiency.
- CIF + Renewal and Retrofit Programme: Condition-linked funding with sustainability uplift.
- Pay-as-you-save finance: No upfront cost, with repayments matched by energy savings.
- Smart Export Guarantee and local funds: Additional revenue from exported power.
Good Eco Group routinely supports schools with Salix applications, AIA tax allowances and fully funded models, helping projects fit within existing budgets.
Good Eco Group: Proven Delivery for Education Estates
Good Eco Group brings 19+ years’ experience, over 9,500 UK efficiency projects and specialist delivery across more than 120 schools in the last three years alone.
With in-house engineering, RIBA architects and dedicated education teams, the group has delivered energy upgrades in live school environments while maintaining safeguarding standards and minimising disruption.
Diocese of Chelmsford Vine Schools Trust
Good Eco delivered a coordinated LED lighting upgrade across 21 primary schools, completed within the six-week summer break. Works included internal and external replacements across classrooms, halls, kitchens and outdoor areas, alongside energy assessments and Solar PV design.
— Suthan Santhaguru, Director of Finance, Vine Schools Trust
Drax Foundation ‘Free Lighting for Schools’ Programme
Good Eco Group has been the sole delivery partner since 2023, upgrading more than 75 schools with full LED replacements.
Core Education Decarbonisation Offering
Beyond Solar: Holistic 2026 Roadmaps
The highest-impact programmes combine measures in the right order: LED first to lower base load, then Solar PV and batteries, followed by heat pumps and fabric upgrades.
Good Eco’s whole-estate assessments identify the optimal sequence for each site, maximising grant eligibility and ROI.
Broader improvements funded via CIF and the Renewal and Retrofit Programme can include roof replacements, classroom extensions, ventilation, insulation and flood resilience — all opportunities to embed low-carbon technologies.
Practical Steps for School Leaders
- Review your Climate Action Plan: Ensure it includes a clear decarbonisation pathway with solar and LED as quick wins.
- Commission a free site assessment: Use detailed energy modelling and roof surveys to understand opportunity and feasibility.
- Model funding options: Compare Capex, finance, Salix, CIF and GB Energy routes side by side.
- Plan for summer 2026: Out-of-term delivery windows fill quickly, especially for multi-site trusts.
- Engage early: With new digital estate tools and Retrofit Programme pilots launching, proactive trusts are already moving.
— James Heath, Marketing Manager, Good Eco Group
Ready to Power Your School’s Net-Zero Journey?
2026 is the year schools move from planning to delivery. With record capital investment, flexible finance routes and proven partners already delivering at scale, the pathway is clearer than ever.
Contact Good Eco Group for a no-obligation education-specific assessment and funding roadmap.
Book a Free AssessmentKey Contacts
Visit goodecogroup.com or email education@goodecogroup.com.
Co-featured in partnership with Good Eco Group. All figures and outcomes drawn from Good Eco Group project data and DfE publications as of February 2026. Individual results vary by site; full feasibility assessments recommended.


