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Objections to the Waste Incinerator at St Dennis
Friday, 11 July 2008
     

 

Objections to the Proposed Waste Incinerator

 at St Dennis

 

Our Branch Chairman, Tony Hilton, has written to Cornwall County Council to express the concern of CPRE Cornwall over the proposal to site a waste incinerator at St Dennis.   Tony's letter raised a number of objections; the text of which is set out below.

 

 

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Tony Hilton

 

1.1   The Cornwall Branch of the Campaign to Protect Rural England fully accepts that we cannot continue to dispose of our rubbish by landfill.

 

1.2   We do, however, have some reservations about the present plan for a large plant at St Dennis, on the following grounds.

 

2.1   In arriving at the proposed central plant for all of Cornwall, Sita have failed to take into account recent new developments, which leads us to the conclusion that the project and, indeed, the very basis for the plan, is based upon out of date information. We have to remember that this is a 30 year contract and, in order to ensure that the project is not considered out of date, or inefficient, in a few years time, we must take a look at how life will be in, say 15 years time. That, in our opinion, Sita has failed to do.

 

2.2   In the first place, there is no rebuttal of the plans put forward in the RSS, where the Regional Development Agency has gone down the path of ‘proximity plants'.  One has to ask why they have done this; at least one would have expected Sita to have shown why this was not possible in this particular case.

 

2.3   The development fails to take into account the proposed Eco-town at St Austell, which is also to be built upon China Clay workings. Have there been discussions with the Eco town developers? One gets the feeling that the left hand does not know what the right hand is doing. Would it not be better to wait and see what H.M.Government's decision is on this?

 

2.4   It is stated that the plant is designed for a throughput of 240,000 tonnes in 2020. This presumably is based upon normal growth projections, but what about the 68,000 EXTRA houses the RSS is to impose upon Cornwall. This will, presumably increase the throughput of household waste by some 60,000 tonnes. Will the plant be able to cope with this? Again, it is not mentioned therefore has it been considered?

 

3.1   Para 1.33 of the planning application admits that, if two plants were built, transport costs would be reduced by 11.3%.  At the time the report was prepared nobody could have predicted the great rise in the price of fuel.  What will these costs be in 2020? Can anybody predict? The prospect of 100 lorry movements a day travelling from all over Cornwall, using an ever rising cost of fuel is beyond belief. The idea may have been sound in 2005, when plans were first prepared, but now, having reached peak oil, that idea should go back to the drawing board.

 

3.2   In this connection one should consider the statement made by the leader of Cornwall County Council at the Annual Meeting of the Cornwall Sustainable Energy Partnership in 2007 that the county council were doing everything they could to reduce their carbon footprint, and, in our opinion, lorries travelling from all over Cornwall to one central depot when there are alternatives, does not fit with the leader's statement.

 

3.3   Cornwall Branch CPRE has prepared a paper on the possibility of using rail transport for hauling waste from two sites, which is enclosed. You will see that, if two waste transfer stations were built at Saltash and Marizon, then 6,600 gallons of fuel [or approx 32,500 litres] of diesel would be saved per year. Even at today's prices that is a saving of £35,000 per year, how much more of a saving in 2020?

 

4.1   We have to consider the possibility that, despite the documents not being up to date, and our views disregarded, planning permission would still be granted.  We would therefore suggest the following points be included.

 

4.2   That before any work starts on constructing the plant, the access roads are built.

 

4.3   That wherever possible, all construction materials are delivered to the site by rail. If this is not possible then a temporary access road should be built for lorries bringing in materials in for the new road [with a view to avoiding as many traffic movements through the surrounding villages as possible].

 

4.4   The hours of work, and lorry movements, should be limited to 0700-1900 Mon-Friday, 0700-1400 Saturday, and no work on Sundays.

 

4.5   That all lorry movements have set routes, both for construction vehicles and when the plant is open, to be incorporated within the planning permission [to avoid short cuts through the villages].

 

Tony Hilton

Chairman - CPRE Cornwall

7th July 2008

 
Woodland Trust
Thursday, 10 July 2008
 

CORNWALL BRANCH SPONSORS TREE PLANTING

 

The Cornwall Branch CPRE has joined forces with the Woodland Trust in funding a project to provide almost 300 Hedge & Copse packs to schools and youth groups throughout Cornwall.

 

Thanks to a generous bequest from the estate of the late Mrs Edith Helen Pierre-Hunt of Polperro, the Branch Trustees agreed to the one-off sponsorship in conjunction with the Woodland Trust. Mrs Pierre-Hunt had been a member of the Cornwall Branch CPRE for many years and the Trustees considered that, to pay tribute to her love of the countryside, no better way could be found than to involve the next generation of young people in educating and encouraging them to value their natural surroundings.

 

The packs have been a great success and very well received. The project connects children with their local environment and helps them to learn to respect it. The Hedge & Copse packs form the largest children's tree planting initiative seen in the UK.  Because of modern lifestyles, many children grow up with scant knowledge of the natural countryside. The campaign aims to redress that by inspiring them to become more in touch with nature. The schoolchildren will help to create havens for thousands of species and woodland areas for future generations to enjoy. They will have the dual benefit of seeing the trees grow and be able to plant the saplings in the school grounds.

 

Thousands of miles of hedgerows disappeared in the twentieth century, in the wake of agricultural development. This hedge and copse initiative goes some way, albeit small, in redressing the balance.

 

The planting of a hedge or copse will attract wildlife and provide schools with ‘living classrooms'. Each pack contains thirty native trees with advice on how to plant the saplings and worksheets about the various species. The educational benefits may also arise in science, numeracy, literacy, and art and design.

 

The packs have been distributed as far north as Fair Isle in the Shetlands and CPRE (Cornwall) is proud to be associated with the scheme in the most southerly county of Britain. 

 

A cultured society is one in which old men plant trees, under whose shade they know they may not sit.

 

 

 

Courtenay V Smale

                                                                   July 2008

 
Is Wind Power A Realistic Solution?
Saturday, 05 July 2008
 

Is wind power a realistic solution to our energy woes?

The UK government has committed itself to some ambitious green energy plans. It sounds good, but is it all hot air?  Reporter Eoin Gleeson from Money Week has filed the following report.


Why the scramble for wind power?


Last year, under pressure from Europe, Britain made a commitment to meet 15% of its total energy consumption from renewable energy by 2020. But with all but one of the UK's ten remaining nuclear stations facing closure over the next 15 years, Britain will also have to replace 40% of its generating capacity over the next six to eight years.


So the Government is hoping to stave off blackouts by boosting British wind generation from four gigawatts (GW) to 25GW, doubling the entire current global fleet of wind turbines in the process.  Prime Minister Gordon Brown said his ambition is to build a wind industry that would be "the equivalent for wind power of what the Gulf of Arabia is for the oil industry".


Wind power: what does the plan entail?


The centrepiece of the Renewable Energy Strategy is a plan to build 7,000 new wind turbines over the next 12 years; 4,000 to be located off the coast and 3,000 more dotted around the country. The 4,000 offshore turbines, each the size of Blackpool Tower, will have to be lowered into the seabed at a rate of more than one every working day between now and 2020 - that's a turbine for every half mile of coastline. More than £100bn will need to be invested for the plan to come to fruition.


Wind power: how will it be paid for?


To come up with that £100bn, the Government is laying out a number of incentives to the private sector.  So far, the main mechanism for encouraging wind generation has been through subsidies. Under the Renewables Obligation scheme, electricity suppliers are obliged to buy a set percentage of renewably generated electricity each year.  In 2004/05, this stood at 4.9% of the electricity they generated, but this will rise to 10% by 2010. This allows wind farm developers to sell the electricity they generate at double the market price.


But the extra cost will ultimately be passed onto consumers through higher electricity bills, says energy analyst Tony Lodge.  The Renewables Obligation scheme, he says, is "a hidden tax on all electricity consumers" and a "huge hidden subsidy" to renewable energy providers. This subsidy currently amounts to "£1bn a year" and will have "totalled some £32bn" by the end of the scheme.  Meanwhile, engineer Jim Oswald told the Energy Tribune that relying on wind power would result in major power failures across the UK and up to 50% increases in electricity bills.

 

Wind power: is it worth it?


Subsidies have certainly been a big success in Texas, where 400ft turbines across the state are delivering electricity at a cost of $0.08 a kilowatt hour. That compares to $0.065 for nuclear and $0.05 for coal. The Texan investment has bred a strong interest in developing wind-generating technology, which will drive the cost closer to that of coal-powered electricity, says The Economist.


But despite advances in "smart turbines" - including rotors developed by aerospace groups, and turbines that flex when the wind blows too strong - the experience of other countries who've invested in wind power is not encouraging. A report by the Centre for Policy Studies on Denmark's experience (see below - Is wind power as green as it seems?), found that windmills added no net electricity because back-up power plants had to be kept running for when the wind fails to blow. Germany, Spain and the Netherlands have all cut huge wind power subsidies, having had a few years to examine the benefits.


Wind power: will it work for Britain?


The most obvious concern just now is how the plan will be carried out. As Ambrose Evans-Pritchard points out in The Daily Telegraph, there are only three major manufacturers in the world able to make the large turbines needed offshore - and one of them, German engineering giant Siemens, has already sold out until 2012.  On top of that, the world has only one ship able to place these 200-ton turbines.


But even if we solve the logistical problems, we will still need to build at least 20 new conventional power stations to back up the grid when the wind isn't blowing. While the wind farms will be spread over a greater land mass in Britain than in Denmark, increasing the chance that the wind will always be blowing in one area or another, the system will still be unreliable.


A Renewable Energy Foundation study of wind speeds in 2005 found that they varied so much that the back-up demand on conventional plants would have varied from 5.5GW to 56 GW in a single month. That would mean switching a 1,000 MW coal plant on and off 23 times to make up for the shortfall.


The introduction of a national computerised system (or ‘intelligent' grid) to manage the power load could improve reliability.  But the best hope for Britain may be to eventually hook our grid up to Europe's network, enabling excess wind in one country to compensate for slumps in another. Until then, Brown's lofty ambitions may remain a pipe dream.


Is wind power as green as it seems?


Demark is the world's most wind-intensive state with more than 6,000 turbines generating 19% of its electricity. But this figure is misleading, says Tony Lodge of the Centre for Policy Studies. Not one conventional power plant has been closed in the period that Danish wind farms have been developed.

In fact, the Danish grid used 50% more coal-generated electricity in 2006 than in 2005 to cover wind's failings. The quick ramping up and down of those plants has increased their pollution and carbon dioxide output - carbon emissions rose 36% in 2006.


Meanwhile Danish electricity costs are the highest in Europe. The Danish experience suggests wind energy is "expensive, inefficient and not even particularly green", says Lodge.

 

Money Week   04.07.2008

 

http://www.moneyweek.com/file/49881/wind-power-is-it-a-realistic-option.html

 
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