Aga Rangemaster halves its carbon footprint and achieves Gold accreditation


Mon 16th Jun 2025 by KBBFocus

Aga Rangemaster halves its carbon footprint and achieves Gold accreditation

Aga Rangemaster halves its carbon footprint and achieves Gold accreditation


Feature by KBBFocus | Mon 16th Jun 2025

Aga Rangemaster – the UK group behind British brands Aga, Rangemaster, Rayburn and Leisure Sinks – has achieved Gold status under the Future Net Zero (FNZ) Standard after cutting its verified carbon footprint by more than 50% in 4 years. 

Independently audited data shows total emissions of 4,360 tonnes CO₂e for the 2024 reporting year, down from a 2019 baseline of 8,746 tonnes CO₂e – a reduction of 4,386 tonnes. Exceeding the FNZ Gold requirement for a 30% or more carbon-reduction positions the business firmly on the UN-backed Race to Zero pathway, a global campaign to halve emissions by 2030.

Operating from 3 British manufacturing centres – Leamington Spa for Rangemaster range cookers, Telford for Aga and Rayburn, and Long Eaton for Leisure Sinks – the group’s lower-carbon production helps kitchen studios, retailers, housebuilders and developers shrink the embodied emissions of the products they specify and progress towards their own Scope 3 targets.

The reduction stems from an ongoing continuous improvement programme that reviews processes, energy use and equipment specifications across the group’s sites. Regular cross-site ‘Delivering Excellence’ meetings identified low-cost efficiency gains on the production lines, while a group-wide switch from fluorescent and high-intensity discharge lighting to LED technology lowered electricity demand. End-of-life plant and handling equipment were replaced with models designed to minimise fossil-fuel consumption, and real-time monitoring now highlights anomalies before they become energy drains.

“The FNZ Gold accreditation is proof, not promise,” said Ian Mincher, business excellence director at Middleby Residential – Aga Rangemaster’s parent company. “We set ourselves a challenge to make meaningful cuts and we have delivered – but Gold status is a milestone, not the finish line. Kitchens are the heart of a home, and our appliances, sinks and taps must be part of a genuinely low-carbon future.”

The FNZ Standard independently validates a company’s carbon footprint annually and recognises sustained progress. Gold status is awarded to organisations that achieve audited, year-on-year reductions of at least 30% against a verified baseline.

Tags: news, kitchens, aga rangemaster, ian mincher, sustainability, appliances