Annandale Distillery Cuts Whisky Emissions With New Steam System

The Scottish distillery says it is the first in the world to use a thermal setup powered by wind energy for distillation.

2026-04-16

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Annandale Distillery in southern Scotland says it has become the first distillery in the world to use a new system that sharply reduces the carbon footprint of whisky production, a move that comes as Scotland’s whisky industry faces pressure to cut emissions from one of its most energy-intensive steps: making steam for distillation.

The distillery, which is working with the technology company Exergy3 and the boiler maker Cochran Ltd., said it is using electricity from nearby wind turbines to power a thermal system that stores energy as heat rather than in batteries. When steam is needed, cold air is pushed through the heated buffer and quickly reaches temperatures of 500°C to 600°C, then feeds a modified boiler that produces the steam used in whisky-making.

David Thomson, a co-founder of Annandale Distillery, said the system was designed to lower the carbon impact of production and described it as a world first. The setup uses three modules and takes up about the space of a typical garage, which the company says makes it practical for wider use in the industry.

Whisky production depends heavily on heat, especially during distillation, and much of that heat has traditionally come from fossil fuels. Annandale’s approach is part of a broader effort in Scotland’s whisky sector to reduce emissions and move toward full decarbonization by 2030. Other distilleries have been testing electric trucks, alternative packaging and other changes aimed at lowering their environmental impact.

Annandale said its sustainability efforts extend beyond the still house. Bottling is done locally, and transport already uses electric vehicles. The company said the goal is to reduce emissions across production, packaging and shipping, not just during distillation.

The project reflects growing interest in how renewable power can be used in industrial processes that require high temperatures. In whisky making, steam generation is one of the most difficult parts of production to decarbonize because it demands steady, intense heat. Annandale’s system is being watched closely because it offers one possible model for other distilleries trying to meet climate targets without changing the basic character of Scotch production.

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