Cork firm NRG Awareness to create 70 new jobs

Company announces growth plans and predicts turnover of €5m by the end of 2020

State grants have delivered energy upgrades for more than 375,000 Irish homes.
State grants have delivered energy upgrades for more than 375,000 Irish homes.

Energy company NRG Awareness is to create 70 new jobs within the next two years.

The firm, which focuses on reducing heating costs for homes and businesses, said it expects to “expand significantly” and grow its direct staff numbers from seven to 30 by the end of next year.

It said this growth would be responsible for up to 50 new heating installer jobs around the State.

NRG Awareness already works directly with up to 150 heating installers on a regular basis around the State, and said it was predicting a turnover of €5 million by the end of 2020. The company has already started marketing and selling its patented products into the UK market.

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State grants have delivered energy upgrades for more than 375,000 Irish homes, with many more expected in the coming years. By the end of 2019, NRG Awareness will have sold approximately 6,000 units and it expects to reach 20,000 by the end of 2020.

NRG Awareness managing director Patrick Hogan said the company’s product range and service model was developed with an understanding that not all clients will have the same requirements.

“They won’t possess the specialised expertise needed to support the enormous amount of energy efficient-but-complex innovations arriving almost daily in the heating industry marketplace,” he said.

“At NRG Awareness it is our aim to ensure we make heating homes and businesses as efficient and cost-effective for our customers as possible, while maximising comfort.”

The company said it helps its customers reduce their home and commercial heating bills by between 15 to 60 per cent. Offering a “hands-on, on-site” approach, they work directly with customers and hundreds of heating installers.

NRG Awareness is an Irish company, headquartered in Cork city. It has worked with many commercial businesses in the Republic, including a number of community hospitals across Munster where it said heating bills were reduced on average by 40 per cent per annum.

Colin Gleeson

Colin Gleeson

Colin Gleeson is an Irish Times reporter