About
Diageo's largest malt distillery and one of the most technologically advanced in Scotland. Designed for energy efficiency with biomass plant and anaerobic digestion.
Production Details
The Roseisle Tale
The Moray coast stretches wide and windswept where the Spey meets the sea, and here, in the village of Roseisle, sits Scotland's most audacious whisky-making experiment. When Diageo broke ground in 2010, they weren't simply building another distillery—they were reimagining what Speyside whisky production could become in the twenty-first century.
The numbers tell one story: twelve and a half million litres annually, making this the largest single malt distillery in Scotland. But walk the grounds and you'll understand the deeper ambition. Where traditional distilleries grew organically over generations, Roseisle emerged fully formed, a cathedral of copper and steel designed with surgical precision.
The water rises from local boreholes, drawn from the same aquifers that have fed this corner of Morayshire for millennia. Yet everything else speaks to innovation. The biomass plant hums alongside the stillhouse, burning wood pellets instead of fossil fuels. Waste heat that once escaped into Highland air now powers the production cycle. An anaerobic digestion system transforms spent grain into energy, completing loops that previous generations of distillers never imagined possible.
This is Speyside's technological frontier, where ancient craft meets modern efficiency. The copper stills—gleaming giants in a space that feels more like a laboratory than a traditional stillhouse—maintain the essential alchemy that transforms barley into spirit. But they do so within systems that monitor every degree, every flow rate, every moment of the process with digital precision.
The engineers who designed Roseisle understood that innovation need not abandon tradition. The spirit still emerges clear and promising, carrying the gentle character that defines Speyside even as it flows through the most advanced distillery Scotland has ever seen. Here, beneath the Moray sky where Vikings once landed and farmers still work fields stretching toward the Cairngorms, whisky-making looks boldly forward while honoring the craft that brought it this far.
In Roseisle, the future of Scottish whisky is already flowing.