Category Archives: County

Latest Incinerator Visit

I Visited the Violia incinerator at Portsmouth  on June 3rd with councillors from the county planning committee (Development Control), council officers and parish councillors from Bramford & Little Blakenham.  It is a very large building some 40 metres high although smaller than the county plans for Gt Blakenham.   Just what would it look like in the Gipping Valley?  A house is 7 metres to the ridge,  In Portsmouth the incinerator is in a large industrial area.

It was an operational plant built several years ago but modern, not a converted old incinerator like the one SITA took us to in Kirklees.  The building was tidy and quite clean. There was no noise or smell outside the building and not a lot inside but they have had problems with some noisy equipment that were solved after commissioning.  There was no sign of traffic problems and no queue to tip waste.

We did not get to the fan cooled condensers that could be a noise problem at Gt Blakenham or at the turbine so the county council’s  noise expert could not take readings

One problem revealed was that on one occasion the plant suffered an inversion layer at low height that grounded the plume from the chimneys within 400 meters.  In Gt Blakenham that would be on housing and the valley area is known for inversion layers.  They were, we are told the issue that forced the high chimney on the cement works.  Long term residents of the area have raised questions on this issue repeatedly and have been told that they should not be worried.  What is the true position?

Pollution measurements were being taken continuously as regulations require and were well below regulatory limits.  Unfortunately the critical pollutants like heavy metals dioxins and furenesare difficult to measure at low concentrations and are only measured every 3 months.  Levels are considered to be OK as long as the combustion temperature is kept above 850 deg Celsius for a set time.  That temperature is monitored continuously.

Overall this plant burnt 205 k tonnes of waste, produced 65 k tonnes of Co2, 44 k tonnes of bottom ash for road building, 5 k tonnes of hazardous pollution control residue (fly ash) and 2 k tonnes of recovered metals. The Co2 is less damaging to the environment than methane from landfill but anaerobic digestion would not emit either.

Overall nothing alarming, better than landfill but still not a good process.

Petitions

Three petitions that had met the 3500 signature threshold were presented to the County Council on Thursday.   The petitioners made very cogent logical cases against closure of country parks,closure of household waste recycling centres and the stopping of the eXplore card for young people.  

For six minutes on each petition Councillors made brief debating points ( I covered country parks as two picnic sites due to be divested are in my area) and then each portfolio holder responded saying essentially that ther will be no action in response to the petition.  

This was not much of a reward for all the effort. Where was the commitment to localism? It appears that no further notice will be taken but input from so many people deserves at least a thorough review of. the subject by scrutiny. I will work on that.

Flowton-Power from East Anglia One

Last night at the Flowton Parish Meeting the developers of the major wind farm East Anglia One off the Suffolk and Norfolk coast, Scottish Power Renewables and Vattenfall Wind Power gave a detailed presentation.  They are seeking a route to connect the power from the 7.2Gwatt windfarm to the national grid at Bramford. The farm will be built in six phases of 1.2 GWatt each, about the power of Sizewell B.  Their intention they said was to bring the power ashore somewhere between the Deben and Orwell and route underground cables either north east or south west of Ipswich. Continue reading Flowton-Power from East Anglia One

Bramford HWRC (that’s Household Waste Recycling Centre)

The good news. The closure of Bramford and 6 out of 7 other sites destined to close has been delayed until July31st.  This should allow other solutions to be found.  Sense strikes home at last!  Liberal Democrats have been fighting this since the budget scrutiny in November.

Its been looking for some weeks as though we would all be doing less recycling and more fly tipping as the County Council closed HWRC’s to “save” money.

Continue reading Bramford HWRC (that’s Household Waste Recycling Centre)

Rede Wood after our meeting with Jane Storey

We had a useful meeting with Jane Storey on Friday night.  At the end both parties had a better understanding of each others position and of what should be done better next time.  We have insisted that the Friends should be involved in any management committee for the Local Nature Reserve and our continued belief that ownership by a public or trust body would be in the best interests of local people.  With the Government responding to pressure and changing direction we remain hopefull.

The County Council are selling a Local Nature Reserve!

Rede Wood

 

The County Council want to sell a Local Nature Reserve, Rede Wood on the borders of Henley, Barham and Claydon.   The professional view of the wood is that “It is  a fairly typical small semi-natural boulder clay woodland of about 18 acres consisting of pendunculate oak, ash, some field maple, with a hazel dominated coppiced under-wood   It has an interesting and important flora, largely connected with the coppice-with-standards management system.  This includes 38 species that are believed indicative of ancient woodland and 30 species listed in the UK Biodiversity Action Plan are present mainly species of bird and mammals.” 

The County have already sold the adjoining but seperate High House Farm buildings and farmland for which we believ they have received a good price and have received a round of bids for the woodland from both private and public organisations.  Continue reading The County Council are selling a Local Nature Reserve!

Fire Control move to Cambridgeshire

The Conservative dominated Public Protection committee has endorsed the decision to move Suffolk’s Fire Control to Cambridge, in spite of the views of all opposition parties that the decision was premature and ill considered.

Liberal Democrats at Suffolk County Council challenged the Cabinet decision which was originally made on 7th December and called it in to be reconsidered a special meeting of the Public Protection committee.  The control room, which is located at the former Colchester Road Fire HQ has to move to allow the County to sell the property.  A number of options for a new control had been considered, including relocating to the former Police control room at Adastral Park or the secondary control room in Felixstowe.  However these were dismissed in favour of the move to Cambridgeshire.  Only 8 of the 23 control room staff will be required by Cambridgeshire and they will face a 150 mile round trip to work each day. Continue reading Fire Control move to Cambridgeshire

Incinerator or “Energy from Waste” in Gt Blakenham

Sita, the preferred bidder, are moving ahead with public exhibitions and consultation at their own risk in advance of contract placement.  Unfortunately the first meetings will be complete by the time you read this.   I have emphasised to them the local concerns about traffic, health and the size of the incinerator building.  It is about 40 metres high.  They aim to make a planning application by December.