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Fancy getting paid for turning off your heating?

When it comes to doing business, win-win situations are hard to come by.

March 10, 2011 10:41
Ziko Abram (left) and Yoav Zingher

ByCandice Krieger, Candice Krieger

4 min read

When it comes to doing business, win-win situations are hard to come by. But Ziko Abram and Yoav Zingher, the directors of new energy demand management company KiWi Power, seem to be on to something.

Founded in 2009, KiWi works in co-operation with the National Grid - which runs the UK's gas and electricity network - to encourage businesses to cut their carbon footprint.

The National Grid pays KiWi, which in turn pays companies to temporarily reduce their electricity during peak times. Larger organisations can earn up to £500,000 a year, simultaneously cutting their carbon footprint and lowering the need for the National Grid to build new expensive power stations.

Ziko Abram, a 28-year-old former investment banker at Credit Suisse, says: "It does sound too good to be true but we really do pay our members to cut their electricity. From a national perspective, it is cheaper to pay a consumer to temporarily reduce their energy consumption than it is to pay for an additional power station, which is both expensive and polluting. It works out for the Grid and our clients are already starting to see rewards. An increasing number of people are showing interest."