Selby Renewable Energy Park has been granted planning permission by North Yorkshire County Council to build the UK’s largest anaerobic digestion plant on an area of the former Tate & Lyle Citric Acid Plant in Selby. Using proven anaerobic digestion technology the plant will generate 8 MW of energy and will have a capacity to treat 165,000 tonnes of food waste per year which would otherwise have been sent to landfill sites.
The facility will have a state of the art pre treatment hall that will allow all forms of packaged food waste from supermarkets, food processors, local authorities and caterers to be processed.
The £20 million project will create 120 new jobs for the town, 40 directly and an additional 80 jobs indirectly. The project will also generate enough clean, renewable energy to power 10,800 homes for a year (or the whole of Selby). The plant, which will occupy eight acres of the former Tate & Lyle Citric Acid Plant in the south of the town, will provide a potential low cost heat source for use by local businesses. An anaerobic digester already exists on the site which is currently being updated and the proposal is to build two new anaerobic digesters. All the clean renewable electricity generated would be sent via the site’s existing power connection to the National Grid.
The proposal has already won the support of the government backed Future Energy Yorkshire, which is the organisation set up to help promote renewable energy projects in Yorkshire and Humber.
Shaun Flynn, Business Development Manager, comments:
“We’re delighted to have been granted planning permission to build the UK’s largest anaerobic digestion plant and provide a sustainable alternative to landfill for food waste as well as contribute towards the governments renewable energy targets. Anaerobic Digestion is widely recognised by the government, DEFRA and Friends of the Earth as one of the best solutions for disposing of food waste. Everyone wins as the waste is treated in a sealed process reducing the generation of greenhouse gases and carbon emissions; a clean, renewable fuel is produced which can be used to create electricity and heat; and we are returning a green, sustainable fertiliser to the land which will in turn grow our crops for food.”
“This project will provide a significant boost to the local economy by creating jobs and will also make available a cheap non fossil fuel heat source that will attract businesses to the area.”
“We will now be able to commence construction in September and the plant will become operational in 2010.”
Jo Adlard, Project Manager with Future Energy Yorkshire, part of Yorkshire Forward comments:
“The Yorkshire and Humber region has an important role to play in helping the UK to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions. The proposed Selby Renewable Energy Park will contribute to our regional emissions reduction targets by generating renewable energy for export to the Grid, while diverting large quantities of waste from landfill.”
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