Like Phase I, Phase II of the SPSF was a competitive fund allocated in a single funding round.
Only applications meeting the eligibility criteria and presenting a case aligning with the fund’s core objectives were encouraged to apply. Due to the competitive nature of the fund not all local authorities were successful in their application and successful local authorities may not have received funding for all the facilities they applied for.
Who could apply?
Applications must have been from a local authority that:
- is based in England,
- has at least one swimming pool that will benefit from improved energy efficiency because of this support
- have applied for funding towards eligible costs.
Local authority applicants (unitary, metropolitan district, district, city and borough councils) were asked to co-ordinate a single submission to the fund on behalf of all publicly accessible swimming pools in their area and engage with operators, independent charitable organisations and other tiers of government (e.g. parish councils) managing public pools within their area.
Any funding needed to be safeguarded with security of tenure. The length of the security required by Sport England varied according to the amount of the grant.
Applicants didn't need to have applied for Phase I, to be eligible for Phase II.
What we’ve funded
Phase II funded eligible costs relating to capital investments that reduce swimming pool facilities’ energy consumption levels. Eligible costs include:
- Material costs
- Installation costs associated with the intervention
- Professional and technical project fees directly associated with the on-site construction/installation of the capital intervention
Reasonable enabling works to prepare the site for the capital project may have been included in the application, provided they were directly linked to the core technologies being installed and these were reviewed for value for money.
What we haven’t fund
- Costs of new build facilities, but the funding could be used to enhance a planned refurbishment as long as the monies were additional to the current plans.
- Costs or liabilities incurred prior to award of the grant funding.
- Ongoing repairs or maintenance costs.
- Interventions that were included in future budgeted plans and are not new capital projects.
- Costs of additional surveys and options appraisals across a number of facilities or for a specific facility
Applicants were strongly encouraged to apply for capital interventions that are known to generate a reduction in energy consumption levels and, wherever possible, a reduction in carbon output of swimming pool facilities.
The interventions in the table below formed the 'menu of options' available in Phase II.
They're listed in a priority order, by which the facility was encouraged to have completed the higher priority items before moving to items further down, although it's appreciated that site specifics may dictate if this was feasible.
Priority group |
Intervention |
1 |
- Photo voltaic (PV) panels
- Install additional metering and monitoring software
- Variable speed filtration
- Shower flow restrictors
|
2 |
- Variable speed fans
- Main pool cover
- Learner pool cover
- Heat recovery to air handling units
|
3 |
- Replace fluorescent lighting with LED lighting
- Variable speed heating/cooling pumps
|
4 |
- Install combined heat and power boiler
- Replace gas boilers older than 20 years
- Thermostatic radiator valves
|
5 |
- Upgrade pool hall windows to triple glazing
- Plant room insulation
- Power factor correction
- Micro filtration
|