Beddington EfW

From Wikiwaste
Revision as of 15:47, 4 May 2021 by Arctellion (talk | contribs)

An EfW facility based upon conventional combustion technology which as yet does not have R1 status. Beddington EfW has permitted operational capacity of 347,422 (+15% permit variation from 09/12/20) tonnes per annum, operated and owned by Viridor. Delivery of waste is by road and the facility processes primarily residual Household Waste and some Commercial Waste[1]


Beddington EfW
Operational
Site Location
Site Location

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

Waste Licence TP3836CT
Operator Viridor
Region London
Operational Capacity 347ktpa
Is site R1? fal
When was R1 Granted?
What was the R1 value 0.88
Electrical Capacity 26.00MWe
Number of Lines 2
Number of Turbines 1
CHP Yes
Technology Approach EfW
Funding Type PPP

Operators Annual Report


Input Data

Year HH C&I Clin RDF Total
2016 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
2017 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
2018 59801.00 20515.00 0.00 0.00 80316.00
2019 94447.00 57197.00 0.00 0.00 151644.00
2020 210137.00 114593.00 0.00 0.00 324730.00
2021 209382.00 115171.00 0.00 0.00 324553.00
2022 197023.00 136798.00 0.00 0.00 333821.00
2023 200430.00 130700.00 0.00 0.00 331130.00


Output Data

Year IBA IBA %ge of Tot IN APC APC %ge of Tot IN
2016 0.00 0.00% 0.00 0.00%
2017 0.00 0.00% 0.00 0.00%
2018 192.00 0.24% 17.10 0.02%
2019 36303.00 23.94% 3169.00 2.09%
2020 79308.00 24.42% 5946.00 1.83%
2021 77847.00 23.99% 6163.00 1.90%
2022 79058.00 23.68% 5918.00 1.77%
2023 74243.00 22.42% 5726.00 1.73%

Viridor Beddington
Viridor Beddington


Summary

An EfW facility based upon conventional combustion technology which as yet does not have R1 status. Beddington EfW has permitted operational capacity of 347,422 (+15% permit variation from 09/12/20) tonnes per annum, operated and owned by Viridor. Delivery of waste is by road and the facility processes primarily residual Household Waste and some Commercial Waste[2]

History

The Beddington facility was built primarily to service a 25 year PPP contract signed in November 2014 with the South London Waste Partnership comprising Croydon, Kingston, Merton, Richmond and Sutton receiving additional residual Commercial Waste. It is located in Sutton on Viridor's Landfill site which is due to close with the operation of the facility, which commenced in January 2020.

On the 9th December 2020 the Environment Agency dertermined a varitation of the permit and issued a 15% increase in the tonnage throughput from a maximum of 302,500 tonnes of waste per year to a maximum of 347,422 tonnes of waste per year.[3].

Plant

Built by CNIM and Lagan which started in 2015 and was delivered in January 2020 at a reported [4] £196m capital cost. The plant comprises 2 lines via standard combustion technology Martin Reverse Acting Grate, generating super-heated steam, and is configured to run on primarily residual Household Waste and similar residual Commercial Waste.

Local Authority Users

Local Authority Data

The table below lists those local authorities who have recorded their tonnage on WasteDataFlow as sending their Waste to this site (either directly or via a transfer station) for the most recent financial year, data was updated on 2023-04-26. The tonnage received cannot be directly compared with the stated historical tonnage received and recorded in the EA statistics as these are recorded on a calendar year basis (i.e. January 2018 to December 2018). The total Local Authority waste received by the plant in the period was: 4,882.94t

A 'zero return' or a below expected return, when compared to the EA Data below indicates that either:

  • no local authority tonnage was recorded/no tonnage was sent to the site in the period (but has been listed as it may have previously received tonnage from a local authority) or
  • a result of the plant being recently commissioned and actually having received no tonnage or
  • a lower than expected tonnage maybe a result of a local authority splitting their tonnage over multiple sites, having less tonnage to send than might be anticipated or
  • it may be a new plant being in 'ramp up' towards full capacity after construction or
  • may be a result of plant shut down and subsequent re-start in a year or
  • the local authority may not have correctly entered the site's details on WasteDataFlow


Authority Tonnage
City of London 18.570
Runnymede Borough Council 386.080
Somerset Waste Partnership 47.380
West Sussex County Council 4430.910

References