Showing posts with label Viridor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Viridor. Show all posts
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
To Russell Goodway re Prosiect Gwyrdd contract with Viridor
Prosiect Gwyrdd contract with Viridor
Dear Cllr Goodway,
We believe that you as chair of PG take ultimate responsibility for the key financial issues being properly checked prior to signing the huge contract with Viridor.
The answers on two basic financial issues appear to be outstanding
1. State Aid – the risk of the European Commission ruling the 25% WG subsidy to be illegal has not been accessed by Accounting officers
2. No updated Value-for-Money assessment has been made, neither by the Project or by the WG review.
You should be aware that the National Audit Office has just announced it is investigating three 25-yr incinerator contracts in England www.nao.org.uk/press-releases/defras-oversight-pfi-waste-projects/;
also that Defra withdrew WIC (waste infrastructure credits) last week for the Norfolk CC’s incinerator, putting Norfolk CC in trouble over their recent 25-yr contract www.letsrecycle.com/news/latest-news/councils/defra-withdraws-ps169m-norfolk-efw-funding
You may have seen that EdF yesterday specified the State Aid issue as needing a decision before they sign the Hinkley Point nuclear deal.
We question that the Project officers are capable of giving appropriate advice on these issues and suggest appropriate independent experts should be consulted, eg. the WAO who are already considering the PG contract.
From Cardiff Against the Incinerator CATI
Letter to Russell Goodway but no reply
Prosiect Gwyrdd contract with Viridor
Dear Cllr Goodway,
We believe that you as chair of PG take ultimate responsibility for the key financial issues being properly checked prior to signing the huge contract with Viridor.
The answers on two basic financial issues appear to be outstanding
1. State Aid – the risk of the European Commission ruling the 25% WG subsidy to be illegal has not been accessed by Accounting officers
2. No updated Value-for-Money assessment has been made, neither by the Project or by the WG review.
You should be aware that the National Audit Office has just announced it is investigating three 25-yr incinerator contracts in England www.nao.org.uk/press-releases/defras-oversight-pfi-waste-projects/;
also that Defra withdrew WIC (waste infrastructure credits) last week for the Norfolk CC’s incinerator, putting Norfolk CC in trouble over their recent 25-yr contract www.letsrecycle.com/news/latest-news/councils/defra-withdraws-ps169m-norfolk-efw-funding
You may have seen that EdF yesterday specified the State Aid issue as needing a decision before they sign the Hinkley Point nuclear deal.
We question that the Project officers are capable of giving appropriate advice on these issues and suggest appropriate independent experts should be consulted, eg. the WAO who are already considering the PG contract.
From Cardiff Against the Incinerator CATI
Friday, October 11, 2013
Cardiff Against the Incinerator Statement Oct 2013
Statement from CATI - Cardiff Against the Incinerator
“Judge Curran has knocked a big hole in Cardiff Council's plan to sign a contract with Viridor;
in finding the company acted unlawfully in starting building works last July, action that Cardiff Council condoned by refusing to stop it.
We look forward to the full emergency hearing, but in the meantime are pressing the Welsh government to withhold their £105 million grant on two grounds:
... that Viridor is not a fit-and-proper person to hold a public waste contract and
... that their £105 million is illegal 'state aid' until ntieid to and approve by Brussels"
We welcome the parallel action against the Welsh government by FOE
Thursday, October 10, 2013
viridor on trial 2-day emergency hearing at Cardiff High Court in December.
High Court judge rules for CATI
We win our long delayed application for an emergency hearing!
Judge Curran agreed that Pauline Ellaway is a 'standard bearer' for many other members of the public who are deeply concerned about the incinerator development.
He ordered an emergency full hearing of Ms Ellaway's case at which all issues will be considered.
The Judge said “the actions of Viridor in the first place in proceeding to begin works prematurely, as they did, and of the council in protesting only after being prompted by CATI, and then effectively condoning such conduct” raise issues of “procedural propriety”.
CATI is pleased that the Judge ruled the Hearing should cover most of our points, though not the failure to consider impacts om the Severn Estuary (Habitats Directive assessment).
Dave Prosser of CATI said: “the judge slapped down the Council's assertion that our objections were 'unarguable'. Their planning committee had the legal case before them at their meeting in February, but led by their chair Cllr Michael Michael, failed to seek proper advice before they dismissed it, deciding then to risk public money on a court case”.
Max Wallis of CATI added:
“The judge has knocked another hole in Cardiff Council's plan to sign a contract with Viridor, with the High Court judge finding the company acted unlawfully in starting building works last July, action that Cardiff Council condoned by refusing to stop it. It's a further reason for the five Councils in Prosiect Gwyrdd to question the £600million 25-year contract to incinerate excessive tonnages of waste.”
------------------------------------------------
We expect the case will go for a 2-day emergency hearing at Cardiff High Court in December.
Cllr Michael Michael (chair of Planning cttee) exposed himself in the Echo on 3rd October, railing against legal aid funding. See our answer on cardiffagainsttheincinerator.blogspot.com and (hopefully) in the Echo or walesonline.co.uk letters.
Max Wallis 07714163254 - on behalf of CATI
Note that we continue to meet on Mondays in the Old Illts club, Splott Bridge.
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Cardiff Planning cmte Shambles over Viridor Incinerator
Cardiff Planning cmte Shambles over Viridor Incinerator
Today 13th Feb. at 2.30pm Cardiff Council planning committee considers over 6 months late a dozen applications to approve or reject Viridor's incinerator.
Rob Griffiths, chair of CATI, will say to the Planning Cttee:
“This is further evidence of what a complete shambles council policy is. They have a Court action against them for failure to act over 6 months against Viridor's unlawful construction of an incinerator. The High Court legal action is to kick off in two weeks."
“Cardiff Council will have to face up to the fact sooner or later that Viridor have been quite prepared to proceed without proper authority and contrary to planning regulations… and utter contempt for the views of local residents and businesses about the economic and health detriment.."
Adventurers Quay Management Company Limited and the 226 residents who live there.have written to County Hall today expressing support for Cardiff Against the Incinerator
Friday, February 8, 2013
High Court order to Cardiff Council STOP VIRIDOR
Case to force Cardiff to Stop Viridor's Incinerator building to go to Court
The High Court judge agreed yesterday, 7th Feb. to order "expedition" of the case..
Both Cardiff Council and Viridor opposed this, seeking to delay the case for the Planning Committee scheduled for 13th February.

Pauline Ellaway, a Splott resident who is fronting the case for CATI said:
"We are pleased the Court has rejected Cardiff's request for further delay, when they should have acted 6 months ago"
CATI has repeatedly asked for enforcement action since the start of work on 20 July. The law firm Richard Buxton demanded action again in December, when the officers agreed a compromise of taking the issue to the Committee of 9th January. They turned down the request for an immediate Stop Order, on the basis that little work was to be done over the Xmas/New year period.
The Planning committee failed to take action** on 9th February, by chairman's casting vote, despite strong pleas from Splott councillors, Huw Thomas, Luke Holland and Gretta Marshall.
Papers for the 13 Feb. Planning Committee should be available later today. But whatever transpires at that Committee, the case will be up in Court within 2 or 3 weeks.
--
Friday, December 14, 2012
Prosiect Gwyrdd charges £110 MORE a tonne to burn our rubbish
CARDIFF COUNCIL TO PAY £166 A TONNE while other Councils pay only £56
25 yr-long contract by saying
we get a better price!
The officers even guessed
a 10-yr contract would be
twice the price, before
the WRAP figures came
out. The evidence of
these figures is of a
worse price. Former PG
Steering Cttee member,
Caerphilly's Colin Mann,
recently repeated this,
so did he ever ask for evidence? Seems cllrs are
being severely 'mislead' by Prosiect Gwyrdd people.
Prosiect Gwyrdd Rip off to pay far over the going price for Waste Incineration.
CARDIFF COUNCIL TO PAY £166 A TONNE while other Councils pay only £56
and to pay this rip off price for 25 years!
Prosiect Gwyrdd (Project Green) rip off applies to all partnership councils
- Cardiff Council,
- Caerphilly County Borough Council,
- Monmouthshire County Council,
- Newport City Council and
- Vale of Glamorgan Council.
The official survey by WRAP - 2012 Gate Fees Report *- finds that
the median gate fee for energy-from-waste incineration is £65 per
tonne The lowest PFI-type incinerator contract has gate fee of
£56 /tonne In comparison PG calculated a 25-contract based
on 2010 cost levels of £36.6 Million for 220 000 tonnes
supplied to the incinerator (transport costs borne by
the Councils). This means they were ready to pay £166
per tonne.
tonne The lowest PFI-type incinerator contract has gate fee of
£56 /tonne In comparison PG calculated a 25-contract based
on 2010 cost levels of £36.6 Million for 220 000 tonnes
supplied to the incinerator (transport costs borne by
the Councils). This means they were ready to pay £166
per tonne.
Why did PG think that was a good deal? Not just that they
wanted an incinerator built in South Wales, but it was
based on PFI-costs in England, which have high bank
charges. Their scheme would rip-off Council
taxpayers and provide cut-price capacity for
businesses at similar rates to those reported by WRAP
Prosiect Gwyrdd excuse thewanted an incinerator built in South Wales, but it was
based on PFI-costs in England, which have high bank
charges. Their scheme would rip-off Council
taxpayers and provide cut-price capacity for
businesses at similar rates to those reported by WRAP
25 yr-long contract by saying
we get a better price!
The officers even guessed
a 10-yr contract would be
twice the price, before
the WRAP figures came
out. The evidence of
these figures is of a
worse price. Former PG
Steering Cttee member,
Caerphilly's Colin Mann,
recently repeated this,
so did he ever ask for evidence? Seems cllrs are
being severely 'mislead' by Prosiect Gwyrdd people.
No wonder Viridor is so keen to build an incinerator/gold
mine in Cardiff and Veolia trying to build in Newport
mine in Cardiff and Veolia trying to build in Newport
The PG comparative cost per tonne is available f
rom the annual 25% subsidy (index-linked )
approved by WAG of £9.124M in April 2009
(based on secret OBC ‘Health Check’ figures of 2010),
making £36.5M total. For the 220 000t pa, this gives
£166 per tonne, higher than the maximum £131/t
for new PFI-incinerators given below. WRAP warns
that the £166 /t gate fee for PG may not be directly
comparable with those at older incinerators
(£32 - £101 /t). Still £166 /t compares badly with
comparison with Defra-agreed PFI schemes of
£56-102 /t (median £76 /t).
rom the annual 25% subsidy (index-linked )
approved by WAG of £9.124M in April 2009
(based on secret OBC ‘Health Check’ figures of 2010),
making £36.5M total. For the 220 000t pa, this gives
£166 per tonne, higher than the maximum £131/t
for new PFI-incinerators given below. WRAP warns
that the £166 /t gate fee for PG may not be directly
comparable with those at older incinerators
(£32 - £101 /t). Still £166 /t compares badly with
comparison with Defra-agreed PFI schemes of
£56-102 /t (median £76 /t).
EfW Pre-2000 facilities £64 median £32 to £75 range
Post-2000 facilities £82 £44 to £101
Defra Gate fee data [9]
<200kt nbsp="nbsp" span="span" to="to">200kt>
200kt to 300kt £76 £56 to £102
350kt to 450kt £68 £57 to £78
[9] Defra information on PPP/PFI projects that have reached contract closure in the last 5 years or are about to reach contractual close in the next 12 months.
*Download the full report - WRAP Gate Fees Report 2012
The Gate Fees report aims to raise price transparency and,
through improving the flow of information, enhance the
efficiency with which the waste management market
operates. A lack of market information may reduce a
local authority's ability to make informed decisions on
waste management options in terms of both economic
and environmental costs.
through improving the flow of information, enhance the
efficiency with which the waste management market
operates. A lack of market information may reduce a
local authority's ability to make informed decisions on
waste management options in terms of both economic
and environmental costs.
Friday, August 3, 2012
Urgent Notice to Cardiff Residents – New Consultation on Viridor Incinerator
Urgent Notice to Cardiff Residents – New Consultation on
Viridor Incinerator
5. The incinerator site is on a flood plain. Extreme storm conditions are becoming worse and more frequent, making the “100 year” flood prediction inadequate. You can say the real flood-risk should be considered under Condition 11 – especially since the toxic ash stockpile could become flooded and spread widely over the surrounding area.
6. The conditions don't solve “satisfactorily” the inadequacies and contradictions in the planning consent (Echo 25 July). Say the Council must force a stop to construction work.
Feel free to select from these points and to add others. Help us demand that the Council make Viridor comply with the law!
Your local Councillors can provide you with further help, but responses need to be in the hands of Cardiff Council by 14th August to Development Manager, City Hall CF10 3ND].
You may have seen the Public Notices
that appeared in Splott and Cardiff Bay recently. Viridor's
Incinerator development is now at a critical stage. Thanks to
pressure from Cardiff-Against-the-Incinerator, Cardiff Council are
now complying with planning law and consulting residents on
legally-binding conditions set out in the planning permission.
This letter contains CATI's advice on how to respond to the consultation. Because of the conditions on the consultation, the Council will disregard direct challenges to the overall planning permission, but we argue for being tough on the conditions.
We suggest you object on some of the following points:
1. The Consultation is difficult to understand and poorly publicised. Cardiff Council were found guilty of “maladministration” in previous public consultation on the incinerator. You can complain the Council have done little better in informing the public this time.
2. Viridor started development of the incinerator on July 20th, the day after their new application was published! This is a breach of planning law. Say Viridor's actions show they cannot be trusted to build and run the incinerator in accordance with the law.
3. The site is still contaminated from its previous occupants. Conditions 3 and 4 of the planning permission says Viridor should have cleaned it up, but they haven't. You can object that Viridor's “report on remediation”, which proposes no clean-up in advance, is inadequate. Object too, to their plan to simply throw away soil they dig up rather than process and re-use it.
4. Issues around the thousands of tonnes of toxic incinerator ash are unresolved. The plan is to process the toxic “bottom ash” at the incinerator building – this contradicts planning condition 23, which forbids them to process hazardous waste. Object that this contradiction means the plant cannot operate, so the whole planning permission should be declared null and void!
This letter contains CATI's advice on how to respond to the consultation. Because of the conditions on the consultation, the Council will disregard direct challenges to the overall planning permission, but we argue for being tough on the conditions.
We suggest you object on some of the following points:
1. The Consultation is difficult to understand and poorly publicised. Cardiff Council were found guilty of “maladministration” in previous public consultation on the incinerator. You can complain the Council have done little better in informing the public this time.
2. Viridor started development of the incinerator on July 20th, the day after their new application was published! This is a breach of planning law. Say Viridor's actions show they cannot be trusted to build and run the incinerator in accordance with the law.
3. The site is still contaminated from its previous occupants. Conditions 3 and 4 of the planning permission says Viridor should have cleaned it up, but they haven't. You can object that Viridor's “report on remediation”, which proposes no clean-up in advance, is inadequate. Object too, to their plan to simply throw away soil they dig up rather than process and re-use it.
4. Issues around the thousands of tonnes of toxic incinerator ash are unresolved. The plan is to process the toxic “bottom ash” at the incinerator building – this contradicts planning condition 23, which forbids them to process hazardous waste. Object that this contradiction means the plant cannot operate, so the whole planning permission should be declared null and void!
5. The incinerator site is on a flood plain. Extreme storm conditions are becoming worse and more frequent, making the “100 year” flood prediction inadequate. You can say the real flood-risk should be considered under Condition 11 – especially since the toxic ash stockpile could become flooded and spread widely over the surrounding area.
6. The conditions don't solve “satisfactorily” the inadequacies and contradictions in the planning consent (Echo 25 July). Say the Council must force a stop to construction work.
Feel free to select from these points and to add others. Help us demand that the Council make Viridor comply with the law!
Your local Councillors can provide you with further help, but responses need to be in the hands of Cardiff Council by 14th August to Development Manager, City Hall CF10 3ND].
E-responses to
developmentmanagement@cardiff.gov.uk; view documents on-line (no easy
read!) at http://planning.cardiff.gov.uk/online-applications/ ref.
10/00149/E, Trident Park.
----------------------
cardiffagainsttheincinerator@gmail.com ------------------ 1 August
2012 -------------------
phone: 07947 214169 or 07817 513610
---- http://cardiffagainsttheincinerator.blogspot.com/
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Cornwall's mega-incinerator hits the buffers What happens when a Council refuses to draw up plan B?
Prosiect Gwyrdd Councils put all bets on a massive central incinerator, egged on by Welsh government grants and politicians. They shortlisted four options, all incinerators, two of which have withdrawn and a third is in doubt, leaving themselves with Viridor able to dictate terms as none of the Councils has a Plan B. Cardiff has admitted that their fallback is to continue sending waste to Trecatti landfill, despite telling us this will incur £200 per tonne penalties. Yet more intensive efforts on recycling, proven to work elsewhere, would avoid this at much lower cost.
P. Gwyrdd/Incinerator's second consequence is the scaring away of alternative bidders (Sterecyle's autoclave; New Earth Solutions' MBT) and deterring local businesses from investing in the diversity of non-incineration technologies. So we might learn from Cornwall where local businesses and anti-incineration campaigners already have quick and cheaper proposals in the wings. Like Prosiect Gwyrdd Councils, the Cornwall County Council failed to plan the waste facilities that businesses wanted, but some are in embryo despite them. Can Cardiff , Newport and the others learn from the story below?
Cornwall incinerator campaigners' alternative plans
21 October 2011 | By Katie Coyne
Jubilant campaigners who won a legal battle in Cornwall against an incinerator scheme are pressing for alternative plans to dispose of the county’s waste.
Last week, the high court overturned planning permission for the £117m Cornwall Energy Recovery Centre at St Dennis, to be operated by Sita, because crucial work scrutinising its impact on nearby Special Areas of Conservation was not done.
The secretary of state was given three weeks to appeal the judgment. Such was the council’s confidence the case would go Sita’s way that preparatory work on the site of the 240,000 tonne incinerator already underway - that has had to be stopped.
Cornwall Council called the ruling “extremely disappointing” and added that delays in establishing a site were costing £1m a month in road haulage and landfill taxes.
Sita project director David Buckle said: “This judgment gives us cause for considerable concern and we will need to study the detail of this decision and consider any possible remedies.
“We have always believed that the CERC is the best technical, financial and environmental solution for managing Cornwall’s waste and it is important that the scheme is able to progress, as without it Cornwall is facing an enormous waste problem.”
Campaigners from Cornwall Waste Forum (CWF), however, have been working on a Plan B for the county’s waste disposal. They want what they call decentralised high materials recycling with gasification and AD, claiming the ruling presented “a brilliant opportunity for Cornwall to move into the 21st century.”
They point to Surrey where county council - also working with Sita - dropped plans two years ago to build two incinerators and instead invested in gasification and AD facilities. The move netted the council a saving of £150m.
CWF’s St Dennis branch campaigner Charmian Larke said: “Why wouldn’t you do that? I think you have to be totally dotty to not do that – of course I am biased.”
The forum also urges the council to use facilities being developed by the private sector. Larke said: “The private sector has been getting on and doing it while the councils have been wringing their hands.”
One example is at Hallenbeagle industrial estate in the middle of Cornwall where entrepreneurs want to build a 45,000 tonne advanced thermal plant which could be scaled up to process half the county’s household waste.
Campaigners argue the current contract could be broken up and spread across smaller contractors. Alternatively, the council could bring waste management in-house, which it did before the contract with Sita.
Cornwall Council warned that terminating the contract with Sita could cost it more than £50m.
A spokeswoman said: “The costs quoted were based on the assumption that we would be required to terminate the contract, on a force majeure basis, and pay SITA between £30m and £50m.
“Terminating the contract would also mean that the council would have to continue to rely on municipal landfill to deal with its waste until at least 2014. The cost of paying landfill tax would be over £14m a year by this time.
-=-==-
Single incinerator was not Cornwall’s ‘only’ option 21 October 2011 | By Katie Coyne
Alternatives to Cornwall‘s single incinerator waste scheme were put to the council but have been ignored for 10 years, say business leaders.
Director of the Hallenbeagle estate Russell Dodge argued that the industrial estate in Scorrier, Redruth, was earmarked as a possible site for dealing with West Cornwall’s household waste. But because the council took no action, business leaders have been developing plans for commercial and industrial waste treatment at the site, which has since been renamed the Cornwall Bio Park.
However, in light of the High Court ruling taking away planning permission for the 240,000-tonne incinerator, Dodge has suggested that plans could be amended to take on household waste.
He said there is space at Redruth to double the proposed 45,000-tonne capacity advanced thermal plant so it could deal with all of the waste in the west of the county – half of all Cornwall’s waste. Once planning has been granted, it could be built and operational by February 2013.
Dodge said: “That’s a plan B – it’s already happening – if they were willing to talk to us and participate with us.
“We presented the Hallenbeagle as an alternative to the single incinerator 10 years ago. It’s really annoying that the council has chosen a non-sustainable option and then has been pushing it through on the financial grounds that it’s costing the taxpayer.”
Dodge said a further two areas within the Cornwall Bio Park have yet to be assigned and could be used for waste sorting and treatment.
He added: “In the meantime, we have been getting on with doing our own thing, focusing on commercial and industrial waste because this is where the gravy is. The waste disposal authority has not been planning for commercial and industrial waste. It’s been planning for household – that’s another failing of Cornwall Council.”
A second site in Fraddon, also close to the A30, already has planning permission to build an anaerobic digestion facility with a 50,000-tonne capacity, producing 900KW of electricity. The site is being developed to take farm and commercial food waste, but could take in household waste if a food waste collection service was introduced across Cornwall.
Dodge said it had been struggling to find backers, but now has a private investor in place and has put in a bid for further funding from the Low Carbon Grant Fund, which is European Regional Development Fund money being administered by the Convergence Programme for Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly.
A council spokesperson said it could not comment until the secretary of state for communities and local government had decided whether to appeal the High Court’s decision to quash planning permission for the incinerator. She said: “We need this clarity before we can make any further comment.”
The Cornwall Bio Park is split in half by the Penzance to London Paddington rail link, so there is potential rail freight access. The site is also close to the A30, providing good access to Camborne-Pool-Redruth and Truro and the rest of West Cornwall.
A planning application was put in this week by Cory Environmental to develop facilities to process C&I waste at the Bio Park.
Cornwall incinerator decision: a triumph for localism? 21 October 2011
Matthew Thomson, chief executive, London Community Resource Network
With 75% of municipal waste infrastructure planning permissions granted through the appeals system, the high court judgment over Sita’s proposed incinerator at St Dennis in Cornwall might look, on the face of it, like another shot in the long-running war between Nimbys and waste planners.
The case is no mere Nimby debate though, and the latest judgment is another twist in an extraordinary tale of convoluted decision-making distorted by conflicting interests, contradictory ‘facts’, loca authority unitarisation, and confused waste planning and procurement.
Perhaps the Government’s Localism Bill can help prevent such painful long drawn out muddles in future - there is certainly huge scope for improvement - but it will do so only if lessons are learned now.
The high court judgment makes apparent that the process by which relevant ‘competent authorities’ reached their various decisions about the proposed Cornwall Energy Recovery Centre was opaque not just to the communities affected, but also to the authorities themselves.
With significant implications for the localism and planning deregulation agendas, there seem to be two key areas where clarity must be provided - one about a community’s right to be taken seriously; the other about the relation between the planning and environmental protection regimes.
At the heart of Cornwall Waste Forum’s case, upheld by the high court, was their ‘legitimate expectation’ that substantive points raised in the planning and permitting processes be properly considered. The fight this small self-funded community network had to be heard at all demonstrates that we still have much to learn about effective working with communities - especially where communities of interest overlap with geographic communities. Just because people are local doesn’t mean they lack technical knowledge or rigour!
The lack of due consideration of the substantive points raised by the Cornwall Waste Forum illuminated a gap, and some confusion, between the Planning Inspectorate, the Environment Agency and Natural England. The boundaries of the planning, pollution control and habitat
protection regimes were found in this case not to meet.
Lord Chief Justice Collins made clear that while the Environment Agency was the authority with regard to the pollution control of an operation, the Planning Authority should attend to its impacts even where these result from an operation controlled by the agency.
So in the future planning regime, if the presumption is to be for sustainable development, whose definition should we be following? It’s clear now that the answer is far from clear. A bad answer will see a proliferation of judicial reviews as we work it out on a case by case basis.
Monday, March 28, 2011
Call for Plaid to stand up against Incinerator ambitions driving Waste Policy in Wales
South Wales WIN lobbied the Plaid conference this weekend - read media coverage here Campaigners urge Plaid Cymru to uphold election pledge on incinerators
WASTE - A BURNING ISSUE
Time for Plaid to stand up against Incinerator ambitions driving Waste Policy in Wales
Plaid’s 2010 election manifesto is clear – 80% recycling/composting by 2020 plus opposition to waste incinerators. So let’s see Plaid condemning WAG’s rotten targets and its subsidies for incinerators –the £9 million/yr for Prosiect 'Gwyrdd' means £30-40million/yr throughout Wales.
Reality of Poor recycling targets and drive to mega-incinerators
WAG’s bias to incineration - subsidising gate fees and promoting regional consortia for 'residual' waste - is stronger than in England or Scotland. Contrary to Jane Davidson’s ‘green’ claims, there are no ambitious recycling targets in Wales are not ambitious. Only 70% recycling, or 65% excluding incinerator ash, not the 80-90% judged feasible. 75% is already reached in Flanders etc. 70% by 2015 is practicable, but WAG defers it till 2025 !
The 5-county Prosiect 'Gwyrdd' is leading WAG's drive for privatisation of waste in Wales, with a projected value of £1.1 billion over 25 years. The 4 chosen companies to bid for 25-year PFI contract are Covanta/Brig y Cwm; Viridor/Cardiff; Waste Recycling Group Ltd/Barry; Veolia ES Aurora Ltd/Newport, all variants of incinerators pretending to be ‘energy’ plants. Two claim to be CHP, providing some heat as well as energy, but don't qualify as they will use little of the heat and hardly reach half the 60% energy efficiency set in Wales.
Their 'Design, Build, Finance and Operate' arrangement is a version of PFI, the disreputable Private Finance Initiative. Prosiect Gwyrdd’s Chair (Lib-Dem Cllr Stephens) claimed it’s only a PPP (private-public partnership) yet “financing for the Project will be predominantly, if not wholly, procured from private finance.”
WAG recruited Howel Jones from Partnerships UK – promoter of Blair-Brown’s PFIs – to cajole and bribe all Welsh councils into similar waste projects. Private companies taking over waste management in Wales was a ‘new’ Labour agenda.
Why oppose the incineration of household waste?
The principal purpose is ‘disposal’ and the 5 counties’ declared plan for 35% incineration means reduced efforts for recycling/composting
Far from helping to 'tackle climate change', burning more rubbish produces far more carbon emissions (eg. from oil-based plastics) than it saves through electricity generation. Cardiff proposes to ignore incinerator CO2 by calling it ‘industrial’, so maintaining ‘green’ pretensions
The ‘business case’ relied on exaggerating future quantities of waste. Waste PFIs need guaranteed amounts of waste per week and they assumed waste tonnages will grow over the years to offset increased recycling.
Poses health risks with toxic emissions and huge tonnages of hazardous ash sent to landfill – with special low rate of landfill tax.
WAG's policy claims to be technology-neutral, yet
# they require the 25-year contracts, Private Finance model, with an incinerator as “reference technology”.
# force authorities to choose mega-waste companies and squeeze out Welsh businesses
# it’s part of the privatisation agenda, that has proved highly costly.
The alternatives to incineration are cheaper, more flexible, quicker to implement and better for the environment. Rather than incinerating waste, the best option is to reduce residual waste to a minimum, through more intensive recycling and sorting. WAG’s own consultant’s report shows 80% recycling is more economic than the 70% they chose, as well as being more ‘sustainable’. Prof. Paul Connett, the leading exponent of the ‘zerowaste’ movement, on a recent visit, condemned WAG’s policy.
P Gwyrdd ignores risks
locked into a 25-year private finance contract, even more expensive since the credit crunch
incinerator ash will be classed as 'hazardous waste', with high costs of treatment or disposal
penalties will be attached to the huge amounts of CO2 emitted by incinerators.
We call on Plaid Cymru tob continue to oppose the use of waste incinerators, disguised as Energy-from-Waste (EfW) urgently demand a independent review of the value-for-money of private finance
demand disclosure of full information, over-riding excuses of commercial confidentiality
Call Plaid Cllrs in Cardiff and Caerphilly to account for supporting Prosiect 'Gwyrdd'
Expose the greenwash of incineration by WAG’s “Waste Awareness Wales”
Stick to 2010 Plaid’s Westminster Manifesto
“We will continue to oppose the use of waste incinerators and support binding targets for waste prevention. We support recycling targets of 80% of domestic waste by 2020 and the introduction of a higher landfill tax. We will campaign for changes in public procurement legislation so that Local Authorities can favour materials from recycled and local sources”.
2008: Conference further calls:
On the Assembly Government to work with all local authorities across Wales to promote a consistent and standardized approach to waste management which takes recognition of the fact that recovery of energy from waste is fullest through maximising recycling including that of plastics, and the separate collection and anaerobic digestion of food way genste; and that, by contrast, incineration is a bad solution, inefficient in energy generation, and damaging to the environment and climate change
South Wales WIN, http://southwaleswin.com/ affiliated to UK Without Incineration Network (WUKWIN)
email southwaleswin@gmail.com
Strangely the lib dems attack Plaid on supporting inconeration when they too support it and chair the joint committee. More here
Cllrs on P Gwyrdd Joint Committtee where tories CALL THE SHOTS!!
Strange bed fellows! 2 Plaid 2 lib Dems 6 Tories
http://www.caerphilly.gov.uk/prosiectgwyrdd/english/joint_committee.html
Lyn Ackerman Plaid Cymru Caerphilly
Colin Mann Plaid Cymru Caerphilly
Margaret Jones Lib Dems Cardiff
Mark Stephens Lib Dems Cardiff
Philip Murphy Tory Monmouthshire
S B Jones Tory Monmouthshire bryanjones@monmouthshire.gov.uk
William Routley Tory Newport
David Fouweather Tory Newport
Cllr Geoffrey A. Cox Tory Vale of Glamorgan
Gordon C. Kemp Tory Vale of Glamorgan
Campaigners urge Plaid Cymru to uphold election pledge on incinerators
CAMPAIGNERS today were due to urge Plaid Cymru to stick to its election promise to oppose massive waste incineration schemes in South Wales.
The South Wales WithoutŠIncinerationŠNetwork (WIN) is pressing AMs, councillors and activists not to abandon their 2010 pledge to oppose the Prosiect Gwyrdd programme, which has won support from the Welsh Assembly Government.
The £1.1bn project privately funded over 25 years could, says WIN, see multiple incinerators built in South Wales, while WAG’s target to recycle 70% of rubbish by 2023 falls short of a possible 80% to 90% recycled.
A spokesman, speaking as Plaid Cymru holds its conference at Cardiff’s Wales Millennium Centre, argued: “Plaid’s 2010 election manifesto is clear – 80% recycling and composting by 2020 and opposing the use of waste incinerators.
“It’s high time Plaid condemned WAG’s rotten targets with subsidies for incinerators.“Shoving more waste up a chimney and spewing toxic emissions into the air will undermine recycling, not increase it.”
WIN also insists incineration poses public health risks with toxic emissions and huge amounts of hazardous ash sent to landfill.
It wants Plaid to oppose all waste incinerators and demand an independent review of PFI projects such as Prosiect Gwyrdd with much fuller information about them.
Independent Caerphilly councillor Anne Blackman said: “We in Europe are being hoodwinked into paying millions in subsidy to process valuable waste that’s dealt with for free or paid for by the collectors in Canada and Africa.
“These plants could put deposits that are smaller than soot into the air that might affect more people than coal dust did in the mining industry.
“We need our public health and environmental professionals to examine incineration proposals and provide scientific and medical evidence about its effect on public health.
“We need to see the evidence and have a public debate – not just foist this onto our great-grandchildren for the next 25 years.”
A spokeswoman for Plaid Cymru said: “Plaid’s commitment is to overhauling planning policy so that decisions in relation to waste can be made close to the people and serve the needs of communities.
“Local people need to have a voice in that process.
“We are also committed to working with universities and industry to find new ways to deal with non-recyclable waste.
“Ultimately, of course, this is a decision for local authorities. Plaid’s sustainability spokesperson Leanne Wood recently reaffirmed Plaid’s opposition to incineration, and questioned the Environment Minister on the Welsh Government’s subsidy to Prosiect Gwyrdd in the Assembly chamber.”
WAG declined to comment given the forthcoming election.
Read More http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/2011/03/26/campaigners-urge-plaid-cymru-to-uphold-election-pledge-on-incinerators-91466-28405958/#ixzz1HshCYMjU
WASTE - A BURNING ISSUE
Time for Plaid to stand up against Incinerator ambitions driving Waste Policy in Wales
Plaid’s 2010 election manifesto is clear – 80% recycling/composting by 2020 plus opposition to waste incinerators. So let’s see Plaid condemning WAG’s rotten targets and its subsidies for incinerators –the £9 million/yr for Prosiect 'Gwyrdd' means £30-40million/yr throughout Wales.
Reality of Poor recycling targets and drive to mega-incinerators
WAG’s bias to incineration - subsidising gate fees and promoting regional consortia for 'residual' waste - is stronger than in England or Scotland. Contrary to Jane Davidson’s ‘green’ claims, there are no ambitious recycling targets in Wales are not ambitious. Only 70% recycling, or 65% excluding incinerator ash, not the 80-90% judged feasible. 75% is already reached in Flanders etc. 70% by 2015 is practicable, but WAG defers it till 2025 !
The 5-county Prosiect 'Gwyrdd' is leading WAG's drive for privatisation of waste in Wales, with a projected value of £1.1 billion over 25 years. The 4 chosen companies to bid for 25-year PFI contract are Covanta/Brig y Cwm; Viridor/Cardiff; Waste Recycling Group Ltd/Barry; Veolia ES Aurora Ltd/Newport, all variants of incinerators pretending to be ‘energy’ plants. Two claim to be CHP, providing some heat as well as energy, but don't qualify as they will use little of the heat and hardly reach half the 60% energy efficiency set in Wales.
Their 'Design, Build, Finance and Operate' arrangement is a version of PFI, the disreputable Private Finance Initiative. Prosiect Gwyrdd’s Chair (Lib-Dem Cllr Stephens) claimed it’s only a PPP (private-public partnership) yet “financing for the Project will be predominantly, if not wholly, procured from private finance.”
WAG recruited Howel Jones from Partnerships UK – promoter of Blair-Brown’s PFIs – to cajole and bribe all Welsh councils into similar waste projects. Private companies taking over waste management in Wales was a ‘new’ Labour agenda.
Why oppose the incineration of household waste?
The principal purpose is ‘disposal’ and the 5 counties’ declared plan for 35% incineration means reduced efforts for recycling/composting
Far from helping to 'tackle climate change', burning more rubbish produces far more carbon emissions (eg. from oil-based plastics) than it saves through electricity generation. Cardiff proposes to ignore incinerator CO2 by calling it ‘industrial’, so maintaining ‘green’ pretensions
The ‘business case’ relied on exaggerating future quantities of waste. Waste PFIs need guaranteed amounts of waste per week and they assumed waste tonnages will grow over the years to offset increased recycling.
Poses health risks with toxic emissions and huge tonnages of hazardous ash sent to landfill – with special low rate of landfill tax.
WAG's policy claims to be technology-neutral, yet
# they require the 25-year contracts, Private Finance model, with an incinerator as “reference technology”.
# force authorities to choose mega-waste companies and squeeze out Welsh businesses
# it’s part of the privatisation agenda, that has proved highly costly.
The alternatives to incineration are cheaper, more flexible, quicker to implement and better for the environment. Rather than incinerating waste, the best option is to reduce residual waste to a minimum, through more intensive recycling and sorting. WAG’s own consultant’s report shows 80% recycling is more economic than the 70% they chose, as well as being more ‘sustainable’. Prof. Paul Connett, the leading exponent of the ‘zerowaste’ movement, on a recent visit, condemned WAG’s policy.
P Gwyrdd ignores risks
locked into a 25-year private finance contract, even more expensive since the credit crunch
incinerator ash will be classed as 'hazardous waste', with high costs of treatment or disposal
penalties will be attached to the huge amounts of CO2 emitted by incinerators.
We call on Plaid Cymru tob continue to oppose the use of waste incinerators, disguised as Energy-from-Waste (EfW) urgently demand a independent review of the value-for-money of private finance
demand disclosure of full information, over-riding excuses of commercial confidentiality
Call Plaid Cllrs in Cardiff and Caerphilly to account for supporting Prosiect 'Gwyrdd'
Expose the greenwash of incineration by WAG’s “Waste Awareness Wales”
Stick to 2010 Plaid’s Westminster Manifesto
“We will continue to oppose the use of waste incinerators and support binding targets for waste prevention. We support recycling targets of 80% of domestic waste by 2020 and the introduction of a higher landfill tax. We will campaign for changes in public procurement legislation so that Local Authorities can favour materials from recycled and local sources”.
2008: Conference further calls:
On the Assembly Government to work with all local authorities across Wales to promote a consistent and standardized approach to waste management which takes recognition of the fact that recovery of energy from waste is fullest through maximising recycling including that of plastics, and the separate collection and anaerobic digestion of food way genste; and that, by contrast, incineration is a bad solution, inefficient in energy generation, and damaging to the environment and climate change
South Wales WIN, http://southwaleswin.com/ affiliated to UK Without Incineration Network (WUKWIN)
email southwaleswin@gmail.com
Strangely the lib dems attack Plaid on supporting inconeration when they too support it and chair the joint committee. More here
Cllrs on P Gwyrdd Joint Committtee where tories CALL THE SHOTS!!
Strange bed fellows! 2 Plaid 2 lib Dems 6 Tories
http://www.caerphilly.gov.uk/prosiectgwyrdd/english/joint_committee.html
Lyn Ackerman Plaid Cymru Caerphilly
Colin Mann Plaid Cymru Caerphilly
Margaret Jones Lib Dems Cardiff
Mark Stephens Lib Dems Cardiff
Philip Murphy Tory Monmouthshire
S B Jones Tory Monmouthshire bryanjones@monmouthshire.gov.uk
William Routley Tory Newport
David Fouweather Tory Newport
Cllr Geoffrey A. Cox Tory Vale of Glamorgan
Gordon C. Kemp Tory Vale of Glamorgan
Campaigners urge Plaid Cymru to uphold election pledge on incinerators
CAMPAIGNERS today were due to urge Plaid Cymru to stick to its election promise to oppose massive waste incineration schemes in South Wales.
The South Wales WithoutŠIncinerationŠNetwork (WIN) is pressing AMs, councillors and activists not to abandon their 2010 pledge to oppose the Prosiect Gwyrdd programme, which has won support from the Welsh Assembly Government.
The £1.1bn project privately funded over 25 years could, says WIN, see multiple incinerators built in South Wales, while WAG’s target to recycle 70% of rubbish by 2023 falls short of a possible 80% to 90% recycled.
A spokesman, speaking as Plaid Cymru holds its conference at Cardiff’s Wales Millennium Centre, argued: “Plaid’s 2010 election manifesto is clear – 80% recycling and composting by 2020 and opposing the use of waste incinerators.
“It’s high time Plaid condemned WAG’s rotten targets with subsidies for incinerators.“Shoving more waste up a chimney and spewing toxic emissions into the air will undermine recycling, not increase it.”
WIN also insists incineration poses public health risks with toxic emissions and huge amounts of hazardous ash sent to landfill.
It wants Plaid to oppose all waste incinerators and demand an independent review of PFI projects such as Prosiect Gwyrdd with much fuller information about them.
Independent Caerphilly councillor Anne Blackman said: “We in Europe are being hoodwinked into paying millions in subsidy to process valuable waste that’s dealt with for free or paid for by the collectors in Canada and Africa.
“These plants could put deposits that are smaller than soot into the air that might affect more people than coal dust did in the mining industry.
“We need our public health and environmental professionals to examine incineration proposals and provide scientific and medical evidence about its effect on public health.
“We need to see the evidence and have a public debate – not just foist this onto our great-grandchildren for the next 25 years.”
A spokeswoman for Plaid Cymru said: “Plaid’s commitment is to overhauling planning policy so that decisions in relation to waste can be made close to the people and serve the needs of communities.
“Local people need to have a voice in that process.
“We are also committed to working with universities and industry to find new ways to deal with non-recyclable waste.
“Ultimately, of course, this is a decision for local authorities. Plaid’s sustainability spokesperson Leanne Wood recently reaffirmed Plaid’s opposition to incineration, and questioned the Environment Minister on the Welsh Government’s subsidy to Prosiect Gwyrdd in the Assembly chamber.”
WAG declined to comment given the forthcoming election.
Read More http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/2011/03/26/campaigners-urge-plaid-cymru-to-uphold-election-pledge-on-incinerators-91466-28405958/#ixzz1HshCYMjU
Thursday, December 2, 2010
Ignore recycling targets says WAG spokesperson
Welsh Assembly misinformation spokesperson is telling Councillors ...increasing recycling would cost more....than incineration??? But Incineration IS the most expensive option. And the 70% target is not ambitious and saying the target is not urgent ...actually implying don't bother. "70% target was only due to come into force by 2025...WLGA members aware... that the implication that 70% is an immediate target is incorrect."
Came across this in the story.below .More incineration lobby news...attacking recycling ...a disgrace that Jane Davidson boasts of better recycling targets yet the WAG spokesperson is saying they don't really matter and giving green light to LAs to ignore them. Recycling is cheaper and creates more badly needed jobs.. ..needs a little more creative thinking... but it seems the Welsh Government Association are too cosy with the lobbyists and incinerator builders..See the buddies here http://www.wasteawareness.org/pm/162
That story.. Recycling ‘too expensive’ for Welsh authorities 8th November 2010
The Welsh Assembly Government has ambitious plans to increase recycling targets to 70 per cent.
However, the Welsh Government Association (WLGA) has voiced concerns that reaching such an ambitious target would cost councils an extra £30m a year. (Wrong see pfi costs) This has led to fears that other public services could suffer.
(Prof Connett A rational policy would give rebates for waste reduction and recycling while surcharging incineration and particularly its ash. Incinerator ash is toxic so the professor criticised the UK for charging only £3 per tonne for landfilling ash, instead of £40 per tonne on normal landfilling of waste.Professor Dr Paul Connett http://cardiffagainsttheincinerator.blogspot.com/ )
A 40 per cent recycling target has already been met, and EU regulations only require 50 per cent.
Aled Roberts, the leader of Wrexham council, said: “Local authorities are committed to increasing the recycling of waste. “On average we are currently recycling around 40 per cent, which is a great improvement on 7 per cent which was achieved in 2000-01.
“As local authorities we recognise our responsibility to the future of the planet and are committed to increasing the rate of recycling as far as possible, in light of all our other responsibilities.” A spokeswoman for the Assembly Government said the 70% target was only due to come into force by 2025. She said: “We worked closely with WLGA members to set this target, so they will be aware that the implication that 70% is an immediate target is incorrect. “There are good reasons behind this figure. Seventy percent recycling is cost-effective, because recycling is cheaper than land-filling and because it means we will avoid landfill taxes.”
See also WAG offering bribes to councils
Came across this in the story.below .More incineration lobby news...attacking recycling ...a disgrace that Jane Davidson boasts of better recycling targets yet the WAG spokesperson is saying they don't really matter and giving green light to LAs to ignore them. Recycling is cheaper and creates more badly needed jobs.. ..needs a little more creative thinking... but it seems the Welsh Government Association are too cosy with the lobbyists and incinerator builders..See the buddies here http://www.wasteawareness.org/pm/162
That story.. Recycling ‘too expensive’ for Welsh authorities 8th November 2010
The Welsh Assembly Government has ambitious plans to increase recycling targets to 70 per cent.
However, the Welsh Government Association (WLGA) has voiced concerns that reaching such an ambitious target would cost councils an extra £30m a year. (Wrong see pfi costs) This has led to fears that other public services could suffer.
(Prof Connett A rational policy would give rebates for waste reduction and recycling while surcharging incineration and particularly its ash. Incinerator ash is toxic so the professor criticised the UK for charging only £3 per tonne for landfilling ash, instead of £40 per tonne on normal landfilling of waste.Professor Dr Paul Connett http://cardiffagainsttheincinerator.blogspot.com/ )
A 40 per cent recycling target has already been met, and EU regulations only require 50 per cent.
Aled Roberts, the leader of Wrexham council, said: “Local authorities are committed to increasing the recycling of waste. “On average we are currently recycling around 40 per cent, which is a great improvement on 7 per cent which was achieved in 2000-01.
“As local authorities we recognise our responsibility to the future of the planet and are committed to increasing the rate of recycling as far as possible, in light of all our other responsibilities.” A spokeswoman for the Assembly Government said the 70% target was only due to come into force by 2025. She said: “We worked closely with WLGA members to set this target, so they will be aware that the implication that 70% is an immediate target is incorrect. “There are good reasons behind this figure. Seventy percent recycling is cost-effective, because recycling is cheaper than land-filling and because it means we will avoid landfill taxes.”
Prof Connett sees 'zero-waste' as largely achieved by 2020.
He reported not only Flanders' 75% recycling but also progress in Italy with 2000 communities signed up and 200 of them already reaching 70%. The Welsh Minister's claim to be leading in sustainability is rendered nonsensical by deferring 70% recycling to the long-term – not even by 2015 or 2020, but only by 2025 do they aim to reach 70%.
See also WAG offering bribes to councils
Nova Scotia (Canada) they diverted 50% of waste from landfill in 5 years (Halifax diverted 60%), created1000 jobs in collection and treatment of recyclables and compostables, and a further 2000 jobs created in the industries handling the recovered materials.
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
Cardiff Against the Incinerator action today in Cardiff and Newport
Join the action today....
On Tuesday Cardiff Against the Incinerator is taking action in two locations - we will lobby the Environment Agency again at the National Museum Park Place Cardiff on Tuesday 7th Sept from 12:30-1:30Cardiff Against the Incinerator will also have a presence in Newport from 11am to 2pm in John Frost Square, in support of the Newport campaign against incineration & combustion plants which are being planned in the city.
The planned BioGen incinerator in Newport and the planned Viridor incinerator in Cardiff are both part of the same scheme, Prosiect Gwyrdd, which is pursuing hazardous and environmentally-unsound solutions to South Wales' waste problem while ignoring the wishes of the general public. Similar schemes are being pursued in Merthyr Tydfil, Barry and Flintshire.
Scientific evidence shows an association between living within 3km of an incinerator and an increased risk of cancers, particularly liver cancer, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and soft-tissue sarcoma. Prosiect Gwyrdd, a consortium of Newport, Cardiff, Vale of Glamorgan, Caerphilly and Monmouthshire councils, meanwhile, is ignoring science in favour of industry propaganda and documents which the Royal Society describe as "misleading".
Cardiff Against the Incinerator offers solidarity to other local campaigns against environmentally unsound waste solutions in support of a united, working-class movement across Wales and Britain. It is a member of the UK Without Incineration Network.
Contact:Edmund Schluessel, campaign secretary 07947 214169cardiffagainsttheincinerator@ gmail.com twitter: @nocardiffburner
some of our recent campaign coverage ...
Protest over incinerator plans
WalesOnline - 25 Aug 2010
They claim the people of Cardiff should have been consulted about the plans to buildincinerators. Catherine Pleace, a teacher from Splott said: “There is ...Incinerator plan comes under fire
Morning Star Online - 26 Aug 2010
Cardiff Against the Incinerator activists staged a protest in nearby Penarth, where there was a travelling display van run by the council to promote the ...
New deadline on incinerator views
BBC News - Aug 31, 2010The deadline has been extended for people to give their views about the granting of an environmental permit for a £150m waste incinerator. ...Splott incinerator consultation period extended
WalesOnline - Aug 31, 2010The Environment Agency has extended the time for people to give their comments about the Viridor incinerator. The consultation period was due to end on ...Environment Agency extend consultation on Viridor draft permit
The Guardian - Aug 31, 2010Environment Agency Wales has agreed to extend the consultation time limit on their draft decision for the Viridor waste incinerator plant following pressure ...
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