HomeWaste home
Water
Energy
   
 
 
Login
Register
RSS   RSS  |  About Us  |  Advertise  |  Cookies
 Home 
|
 News 
|
 Jobs 
|
 Supplier Directory 
|
 edie+ 
|
 Training 
|
 Awards 
|
 Events 
|
 Tenders 
|
 Webinars 
|
 Exclusive Research 
|
 Latest | Search | Archives | News by email | Newsfeeds | Blogs | Most read | On this day...
 Jobs Home Page | Search | Latest | Jobs by email | Post a job
 Add new company | Edit company details | Search | Make enquiry | Advertise
 Latest | Search | Email alerts | Subscribe | About
 Course Calendar | Adhoc Courses | Search courses | Submit a course | Edit or submit a course | Change training company
 All events | Search / Browse Events | Submit your event
 Search | Email updates | Recent Tenders | Submit Tender
 edieTV | edie Audio | Blogs | edie conference presentations | Request / submit a presentation
 Closing the loop: risk or reward? | Why are business leaders prioritising sustainability? |
 
Tweet
1 comments 

EfW biomass plant gains double ROCs approval


13 December 2011, source edie newsroom

Artist's impression of the EnergyPark site
Artist's impression of the EnergyPark site
An energy-from-waste facility in Peterborough has received renewable obligation certificate (ROCs) pre-accreditation approval from Ofgem.
Related articles
In brief: Energy-from-waste contract news

In brief: energy-from-waste contract news

Defra minister unveils Agrivert anaerobic digestion plant

ANALYSIS: Energy powers up as circular economy bottleneck

Value of European EfW market will rise to $5bn by 2016



EnergyPark Peterborough, which is operated by Green Energy Parks (GEP), uses mechanical recycling, biomass gasification and plasma melting of air pollution control residues to create recycled product and renewable energy.

It aims to send zero waste to landfill and the park has, GEP claims, the potential to divert 750,000 tonnes of waste, instead using it to generate renewable energy, with the overall goal of changing how waste is dealt with in the UK.

According to GEP, months of research and development was conducted to gain Ofgem verification that fuels measurement and sampling procedure used at the park is "robust and reliable". This, GEP says marks a "big step forward for the project", which it claims "will challenge the way we deal with waste in the UK".

The scheme received pre-accreditation approval for the renewable energy it will generate under the current ROCs bandings for gasification and pyrolysis, at a level of two ROCs per megawatt hour of electricity produced.

GEP managing director, Chris Williams said: "This is a significant achievement in the UK's transition to a low carbon economy and moving closer to solutions that provide reliable, green energy for years to come.

"EnergyPark Peterborough will sustainably divert 750,000 tonnes of waste from landfill per year, at the same time as generating thousands of megawatt hours of renewable energy. In the UK we produce 280 million tonnes of rubbish per year - we have to act now to tackle this."

Carys Matthews

Close  

Email  Send to a friend

Their email address

Your email address

Your name

Your Message
This Is CAPTCHA Image
Enter number above (anti-spam)
(We will not record your personal details)
Email  Send to a friend   Print   Printer friendly
Close  

Print   Link to this page

Simply copy and paste the HTML below to link to this story
  Print  Link to this page

This story is tagged with:
| biomass | gasification | ofgem | zero waste | energy from waste
Click a keyword to see more stories on that topic, view related news, or find more related items.

Tweet
del.icio.us digg technorati cosmos blinklist reddit newsvine nowpublic stumbleUpon Add to diigo Add to LinkedIn Facebook

Comments
flag as inappropriateflag as inappropriate
By Michael Gallagher
Waste incineration/gasification recovers at best a tenth of the energy used to make the products in our rubbish. It is fundamentally unsustainable.




You need to be logged in to make a comment. Don't have an account? Set one up right now in seconds!



© Faversham House Group Ltd 2011. edie news articles may be copied or forwarded for individual use only. No other reproduction or distribution is permitted without prior written consent.

Products & Services



Renewable power & energy

Significant changes to the power industry are anticipated over the next 20 years as the UK responds to the three strategic challenges of climate change, diminishing indigenous fossil reserves and proliferation of small-scale, distributed generation. The key implications, stimulated through policy an... read more



Waste Management

AMEC's experience and knowledge of municipal, industrial and commercial waste has been built upon delivering our expertise to our customers in policy regulation, contract design, risk management, compliance and the design and engineering of waste management systems and assets. ... read more



Hydrogen monitoring improves Syngas efficiency

Syngas (synthesis gas) efficiency is greatly improved when hydrogen levels are monitored using a new sensor technology from Quantitech that is able to measure continuously without interference from other gases.... read more

See all Products & Services


Sign up for our newsletters





Most read stories

  • Illegal waste boss arrested on runway lands in jail
  • Levi's shows real bottle in 'waste less' designer denim drive
  • Westminster locks out metal theft with Taylor-made bin device
  • Scotland to fulfil potential with world's largest wave farm
  • Major UK businesses call for Government clarity on decarbonising economy
  • Lord Deben: UK must commit to low carbon technology to achieve 2050 emissions target

Latest Waste Jobs


See more jobs

Waste Events

Exhibitions | Seminars | Conferences


Webinar: Re-writing the resource rule-book

Recorded on 24/11/2011 Maximising the potential for waste as an energy resource... read more

See all events

More from edie


Channels
Energy, Waste, Water

Knowledge Hubs
Green Buildings, Contaminated Land, Anaerobic Digestion & Biogas, Green Retail, Edie Legal, CRC - Carbon Reduction Commitment, Sustainable Schools,

Other Faversham House Websites
Faversham House, Desalination & Water Reuse, edie.net Suppliers, Environment Awards, Sustainabilitylive!, Sustainable Business, Utility Week

Partner Microsites
AMP/plus

Sign up for our Newsletters


To stay up to date with our newsletters, you need a user account.
Login for existing customers
For existing customers
Sign up for new customers
For new customers

Social Media


edie on Twitter
Twitter
edie's RSS feeds
RSS
edie on YouTube
YouTube
edie on LinkedIn
LinkedIn
edie Blogs
Blogs
edie on Facebook
Facebook

Useful Links


■ About us
■ Feedback
■ Register
■ Contact
■ Advertise
■ Editorial
■ RSS Feeds
■ Social networking
■ News on your website
■ Find-it-for-me
■ Publications
■ Partners
■ Discussions
■ Quiz
■ Consultancy
■ edieTV




Cookies


We use cookies to make this site as useful as possible. They are small text files we put in your browser to track and assist usage of our site but, with the exception of cookies that help you log in, they don't tell us who you are. Our site also serves third party cookies, including Google Analytics cookies which are used to produce traffic reports and may be used to serve advertising through Google Adwords or another network, after you have left our site.
You can control cookies in your browser settings, and can opt out of Google's use of cookies by using their Ads Preferences Manager. If you use our site it implies that you consent to our cookie usage. To find out more about how we use cookies and how you can control them, click here to see our cookie policy.