Churchill Environmental Services (CES) has strengthened its portfolio following a hattrick of new contract wins with Nuneaton & Bedworth Borough Council, Avon Fire & Rescue Service, and Falmouth University.
Nuneaton & Bedworth Borough Council has appointed CES via the Efficiency East Midlands (EEM) framework on a three-year contract, with the option for two more years.
The scope of work includes planned preventative maintenance monitoring to provide transparency (monthly temperature checks, quarterly showers, annual inspections), legionella risk assessments, written control schemes, and remedial and reactive plumbing works.
As part of the mobilisation, CES carried out full asset verification and implemented an updated compliance scheme. CES was chosen after identifying areas of improvement in the council’s property and asset management data, its in-depth legionella management plan to implement early in mobilisation, and its site-specific written control schemes.
Avon Fire & Rescue Service has appointed CES to deliver legionella monitoring and water hygiene compliance across its 24 sites, including wholetime, day-crewed and on-call fire stations, and administrative centres.
The team will provide monthly PPM visits, emergency call-out support, risk assessments and scientific analysis of suspect samples, leveraging CES’ experience working with other blue light organisations, such as Dorset and Wiltshire Fire & Rescue. The contract is for two years with the option of two more.
Falmouth University has appointed CES on a three-year contract to deliver water system planned preventive maintenance, repair services and call-out support across the campus.
CES was appointed in July following a competitive tender and pre-engagement process. Falmouth University was impressed by CES’ experience delivering similar contracts, its strong local presence and its approach to social value, including ongoing apprenticeship training and community initiatives.
Spencer Culley, Managing Director at Churchill Environmental Services, said of the new contract awards: “These three wins reflect the trust our clients place in us to deliver critical compliance services. Whether working with councils, emergency services or universities, our focus remains on providing technical excellence, seamless collaboration and the highest standards of safety and compliance.”
Wednesday 14 January at 11:00am
Building Management Systems (BMS) have long been used to control the heart of a building – monitoring and controlling its essential systems such as lighting, ventilation, heating and air conditioning. Facilities Managers want the best visibility to help detect and deal with concerns before they become issues.
This webinar brings together the experts from energy network provider, E.ON along with FM thought leaders to discuss moving from a reactive service to a proactive service. By identifying energy issues early and automatically, instead of occupants reporting issues, then potential faults can be identified early and remedied. The BMS does this before the problem occurs by using smart alerting and EMC support services.
Panel:
- Sara Bean: Editor FMJ (Facilities Management Journal)
- Nick Westlake: Energy and Service Delivery Manager at E.ON Control Solutions
- Sunil Shah, the author of IWFM’s Energy Management Good Practice Guide and MD of Acclaro Advisory
- David Cermak, Regional Facilities Manager for David Lloyd Clubs
To register for the webinar which will be taking place on 14 January 2026 at 11:00am click here.

