Triodos Renewable Energy Bond - Issue 1

Activate your money with a Triodos Renewable Energy Bond – a new way to use your savings to support clean, green electricity.
The money you invest in a Triodos Renewable Energy Bond will be used to help finance the generation of renewable energy, expanding the availability of this vital resource and reducing the impact of damaging carbon emissions. As we move into an age of uncertainty with a less than predictable future, the Triodos Renewable Energy Bond offers you a decent return and one certainty; your money is doing its bit – harnessing the elements and evolving a new generation of ideas and technologies that promise to help make the world a safer and cleaner place.
Features and benefits:
- The account offers you the chance of a clean\er environment
- A healthy fixed interest rate of 4.5% AER/gross
- Invest from £2,500 to £10,000
- Interest is calculated daily and can be paid either annually into your account or monthly to your nominated account
- Two year fixed term savings account
- No early closure, further deposits or withdrawals are allowed
- Open to all UK residents aged 16 or over
- Limited issue – offered strictly on a first come first served basis
- Special terms and conditions apply - click on the link below to download a copy
To apply for a Triodos Renewable Energy Bond and start using your savings to support clean power generation, click here for more information and to complete an application form online. Or call us on 0500 008 720 and we'll send you an application pack.
- Request brochure
- We'll send you information about an account that suits you.
- Interest rates
- Find out our current rates for personal savers.
- Philip Revell - Farming for a better future
- Triodos Bank saver Philip Revell writes about his visit to Whitmuir Farm near Edinburgh - one of the businesses his money has helped support.
- Ian Price - A year in the life of an organic banker
- As the UK’s only dedicated organic farming bank manager, Triodos Bank’s Ian Price is closer than most to the issues and their effect on farmers across the country. Here, he reflects on an eventful 2007.


