Isle of Wight Waste Recovery Park: Difference between revisions

From Wikiwaste
Arctellion (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Bin52 (talk | contribs)
 
(5 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Category:EfW Plants]]
{{#vardefine:epr|QP3337AD}}[[Category:EfW Plants]]
{{EfWTemplate|EPR=Tbc#20|id=67}}
An integrated [[EfW]] facility with other treatment technologies at the Isle of Wight site in Newport. The original plan was to retrofit the old [[EfW]] facility with new [[Gasification]] technology but following complications with the retrofit process the technology was changed in 2017 to a conventional [[combustion]] process technology. The [[EfW]] element of the Isle of Wight facility has a permitted operational capacity of 44,000 tonnes per annum, and has been developed, and will be operated by, [[AmeyCespa]] under its long term [[PPP]] contract with the [[Isle of Wight]].{{EfWTemplate|EPR={{#var:epr}}|id=67}}
[[File:Screenshot 2022-07-25 080607.png|400px|left|IOW EfW Plant, all rights reserved IOW radio]]__TOC__<br clear='left' />


==Summary==
==Summary==
An integrated [[EfW]] facility with other treatment technologies at the Isle of Wight site in Newport. The original plan was to retrofit the old [[EfW]] facility with new [[Gasification]] technology but following complications with the retrofit process the technology was changed in 2017 to a conventional combustion process technology. The [[EfW]] element of the Isle of Wight facility has a permitted operational capacity of 44,000 tonnes per annum, and has been developed, and will be operated by, [[AmeyCespa]] under its long term [[PPP]] contract with the [[Isle of Wight]].
An integrated [[EfW]] facility with other treatment technologies at the Isle of Wight site in Newport. The original plan was to retrofit the old [[EfW]] facility with new [[Gasification]] technology but following complications with the retrofit process the technology was changed in 2017 to a conventional [[combustion]] process technology. The [[EfW]] element of the Isle of Wight facility has a permitted operational capacity of 44,000 tonnes per annum, and has been developed, and will be operated by, [[AmeyCespa]] under its long term [[PPP]] contract with the [[Isle of Wight]].


==Technology==
==Technology==
The original [[Gasification]] approach was based upon the [[Energos]] technology. The new solution is a two-stage conventional combustion approach on a fixed grate by [[Michaelis Environmental Technology]]<ref>https://www.iow.gov.uk/news/Energy-from-waste-provider-announced Isle of Wight Council Announcement]</ref>.
The original [[Gasification]] approach was based upon the [[Energos]] technology. The new solution is a two-stage conventional combustion approach on a fixed grate by [[Michaelis Environmental Technology]]<ref>[https://www.iow.gov.uk/news/Energy-from-waste-provider-announced Isle of Wight Council Announcement]</ref>.


==Construction==
==Construction==
The new technology approach commenced construction in 2017 and was forecast for completion in spring 2019<ref>[https://www.letsrecycle.com/news/latest-news/isle-wight-drops-gasification-moving-bed-facility/ Letsrecycle Article]</ref>. No other detail on the commissioning and operational status is available in the public domain at present.  
The new technology approach commenced construction in 2017 and was forecast for completion in spring 2019<ref>[https://www.letsrecycle.com/news/latest-news/isle-wight-drops-gasification-moving-bed-facility/ Letsrecycle Article]</ref> but presently forecast to complete in summer 2021<ref>[https://www.letsrecycle.com/news/latest-news/ameys-isle-of-wight-efw-further-behind-schedule/ Letsrecycle Article]</ref>. In May 2022 it was reported that there has been commissioning issues with the plant, with handover now planned July 2022 following continuous 30 day performance test requirements<ref>https://www.iwradio.co.uk/news/isle-of-wight-news/waste-plant-handover-pushed-back-again/</ref>


==Waste Input==
==Waste Input==

Latest revision as of 09:37, 26 July 2022

An integrated EfW facility with other treatment technologies at the Isle of Wight site in Newport. The original plan was to retrofit the old EfW facility with new Gasification technology but following complications with the retrofit process the technology was changed in 2017 to a conventional combustion process technology. The EfW element of the Isle of Wight facility has a permitted operational capacity of 44,000 tonnes per annum, and has been developed, and will be operated by, AmeyCespa under its long term PPP contract with the Isle of Wight.

Isle of Wight Waste Recovery Park
Operational
Site Location
Site Location

See Residual EfW → page for a larger UK Wide map.

Waste Licence QP3337AD
Operator Thalia Waste Management
Region South East
Operational Capacity 44ktpa
Is site R1? fal
When was R1 Granted?
What was the R1 value 0.00
Electrical Capacity 3.30MWe
Number of Lines 0
Number of Turbines 0
CHP No
Technology Approach ACT
Funding Type PPP

Operators Annual Report


Input Data

Year HH C&I Clin RDF Total
2023 37577.00 4313.00 0.00 1103.00 42993.00


Output Data

Year IBA IBA %ge of Tot IN APC APC %ge of Tot IN
2023 2945.00 6.85% 354.00 0.82%

IOW EfW Plant, all rights reserved IOW radio
IOW EfW Plant, all rights reserved IOW radio


Summary

An integrated EfW facility with other treatment technologies at the Isle of Wight site in Newport. The original plan was to retrofit the old EfW facility with new Gasification technology but following complications with the retrofit process the technology was changed in 2017 to a conventional combustion process technology. The EfW element of the Isle of Wight facility has a permitted operational capacity of 44,000 tonnes per annum, and has been developed, and will be operated by, AmeyCespa under its long term PPP contract with the Isle of Wight.

Technology

The original Gasification approach was based upon the Energos technology. The new solution is a two-stage conventional combustion approach on a fixed grate by Michaelis Environmental Technology[1].

Construction

The new technology approach commenced construction in 2017 and was forecast for completion in spring 2019[2] but presently forecast to complete in summer 2021[3]. In May 2022 it was reported that there has been commissioning issues with the plant, with handover now planned July 2022 following continuous 30 day performance test requirements[4]

Waste Input

The input material is residual Household Waste under the PPP with the Isle of Wight and some local residual Commercial Waste.

References