25 Feb 2026

Severn Trent support helps Grace Cares rescue more bulky care equipment from landfill

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Grace Cares is expanding its van operations thanks to new support from Severn Trent - enabling significantly more care equipment to be rescued from landfill and redistributed to households who urgently need it.

The not-for-profit organisation exists to make care more sustainable by rescuing pre-loved equipment and making it available at affordable prices.

Until now, van collections have relied heavily on volunteer drivers and limited operational capacity.

With Severn Trent’s backing, that capacity will significantly increase - allowing Grace Cares to collect and deliver more large, heavy items such as profiling beds, rise and recliner chairs and mobility scooters.

Across 2026, Grace Cares estimates the expanded service will rescue more than 1,500 additional bulky care items, prevent around 37 tonnes of waste from entering landfill, save around 180 cubic metres of landfill space and prevent close to 8 tonnes of CO₂ emissions.

By increasing its ability to transport larger items, Grace Cares expects hundreds more individuals to benefit across the year - including older people, unpaid caregivers and individuals returning home from hospital.

Emma Smith, co-founder of Grace Cares, said: “Our volunteers have been incredible in helping us build this model, but bulky items like beds and rise and recliners require additional capacity and coordination.

“With Severn Trent’s support, we can now step up our ability to rescue the items that are hardest to move - and therefore most likely to be discarded.

“This isn’t about sending a van to collect small household items that people can easily bring to us. It’s about intervening where transport is the real barrier - ensuring large, life-changing pieces of equipment don’t go to waste.”

Smaller care items will continue to be managed through drop-off and collection arrangements at the Grace Cares unit.

The expanded van service is specifically designed to address the transport gap for heavy, bulky equipment.

By supporting this expansion, Severn Trent is helping to strengthen a circular solution that delivers measurable environmental impact while improving quality of life for local residents.

Through this partnership, more essential equipment will stay in circulation, more carbon will be saved, and more households will be supported to live safely and independently at home.

Pictured: From left - Grace Cares founder Emma Smith, Adam Harrison and Hannah Montgomery

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