Lakeside EfW

From WikiWaste

An EfW facility based upon conventional combustion technology and considered an ERF based on its R1 status. Lakeside EfW has permitted operational capacity of 450,000 tonnes per annum, operated by Lakeside Energy From Waste Ltd a joint venture between Viridor and Grundon. Delivery of waste is by road, with a location close to the M25/M4 intersection, and the facility processes primarily residual Household Waste and Commercial Waste[1]. The construction of the third runway at Heathrow Airport would have necessitated the movement of the facility, with plans submitted in June 2019 to Slough Borough Council [2] most recently reported in late 2020 as withdrawn as an application in DEFRA data.


Lakeside EfW
Operational
Site Location
Site Location

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

Waste Licence BT7116IW
Operator Viridor & Grundon Waste Management
Region South East
Operational Capacity 468ktpa
Is site R1? Yes
When was R1 Granted? 2015-12-09
What was the R1 value 0.68
Electrical Capacity 37.00MWe
Number of Lines 2
Number of Turbines 1
CHP No
Technology Approach EfW Incineration
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 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
2019 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
2020 261967.00 155012.00 316.00 0.00 417791.00
2021 234494.00 157409.00 1163.00 0.00 393522.00
2022 255084.00 170094.00 12.00 0.00 425237.00


Output Data

Year IBA IBA %ge of Tot IN APC APC %ge of Tot IN
2016 80033.40 0.00% 12653.58 0.00%
2017 81724.96 0.00% 12853.76 0.00%
2018 77619.00 0.00% 12478.00 0.00%
2019 76164.00 0.00% 12651.00 0.00%
2020 78462.00 18.78% 12422.00 2.97%
2021 73819.00 18.76% 11925.00 3.03%
2022 78342.00 18.42% 11156.00 2.62%

Viridor Lakeside
Viridor Lakeside


Summary

An EfW facility based upon conventional combustion technology and considered an ERF based on its R1 status. Lakeside EfW has permitted operational capacity of 450,000 tonnes per annum, operated by Lakeside Energy from Waste Ltd a joint venture between Viridor and Grundon. Delivery of waste is by road, with a location close to the M25/M4 intersection, and the facility processes primarily residual Household Waste and Commercial Waste[3]. The construction of the third runway at Heathrow Airport would have necessitated the movement of the facility, with plans submitted in June 2019 to Slough Borough Council [4] most recently reported in late 2020 as withdrawn as an application in DEFRA data.

History

The Lakeside facility was built to service a number of local authorities in the region, originally including Poole, Wiltshire, RE3 Partnership (comprising the Berkshire authorities of Bracknell, Wokingham and Reading) and WLWA (before its contract to send material to Avonmouth), with anticipated total throughput of up to 440,000 tonnes per annum - receiving additional residual Commercial Waste to those authorities listed below.

Plant

Built by Itochu-Takuma under an EPC-turnkey contract and was delivered in January 2010 at a reported [5] £160m capital cost, comprising conventional moving grate combustion technology and generating a design output of 37MWe (vs the capacity of 30MWe listed).

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: 253,152.99t

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
Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council 1855.620
Bracknell Forest Borough Council 15551.460
Bromley LB 353.200
Carmarthenshire County Council 62.950
Ceredigion County Council 7.600
Derby City Council 311.040
Derbyshire County Council 39.980
Hertfordshire County Council 428.480
Monmouthshire CC 25.040
Pembrokeshire County Council 33.440
Reading Borough Council 24821.000
Rhondda Cynon Taff CBC 1130.580
Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames 164.102
Slough Borough Council 44691.570
Swindon Borough Council 308.520
West Berkshire District Council 95.040
West London Waste Authority 86651.730
West Sussex County Council 6679.140
Wiltshire 44186.540
Wokingham Council 25755.960


Waste Tonnage, By Origin

The table shows a list of the Waste for the Permit BT7116IW, that has arrived into sites as reported to the Regulator and then publicised in their reported statistics. The Data was last updated on October 2023. The total reported tonnage arriving at the site was: 425,237.26t. Where this tonnage exceeds that reported in year of the corresponding annual report, this may be due to the following reasons:

  • Tonnage may have been received but not incinerated, i.e. the material is held pending incineration (the operator return to the EA reports as received whereas the annual report focuses on when the waste is incinerated.)
  • Material may have been received into the site but treated in some other way than incineration.
  • Material may have been received on the but transferred out of site for disposal/treatment at another site rather than incineration on the site.
EWC Code Origin of Waste Tonnes In
20 03 01 Reading 49084.98
20 03 01 South West 29298.12
20 03 01 Wiltshire 25958.14
20 03 01 South Oxfordshire 3453.90
19 12 12 Basingstoke and Deane 3141.16
20 03 01 London 48421.94
20 03 01 Hampshire 2317.54
20 03 01 Oxfordshire 7772.98
19 02 03 Hounslow 4465.82
20 03 01 Bracknell Forest 20254.78
20 01 08 Essex 1078.58
18 01 04 Essex 104.98
20 02 03 Croydon 21227.82
20 03 01 West Berkshire 8719.50
20 03 01 Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole 11098.02
20 03 01 Guildford 3183.92
20 01 08 Slough 40397.54
19 12 12 Windsor and Maidenhead 369.70
18 01 04 London 2065.86
20 03 01 Mid Sussex 1989.94
16 03 05* Doncaster 46.78
18 01 03* Oxfordshire 235.52
18 01 04 Eastleigh 1657.52
19 12 12 Milton Keynes 842.96
20 02 03 Dorset 124.50
18 01 04 Hillingdon 8361.34
16 03 06 West Sussex 4.30
19 12 12 Rhondda Cynon Taf 727.32
20 03 01 Mole Valley 1088.38
20 03 01 Hertfordshire 1909.24
20 01 08 Hounslow 13568.44
18 01 09 West Sussex 194.44
20 01 08 West Sussex 89.38
19 12 12 Blaenau Gwent 117.96
20 03 01 Richmond upon Thames 4560.60
20 03 01 Slough 63743.44
19 12 12 Westminster 3698.32
20 03 01 Hillingdon 21640.46
19 12 10 Milton Keynes 1761.68
20 03 01 Norfolk 203.86
19 12 12 Somerset 73.42
20 03 01 West Sussex 2207.04
20 03 01 Swindon 11475.30
20 03 01 Kingston upon Thames 48.92
20 03 01 Dorset 2450.92


References