Vine Street EfW (Kirkless EfW)

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Suez Kirklees
Suez Kirklees


Vine Street EfW (Kirkless EfW)
Operational
Site Location
Site Location

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

Waste Licence BJ6178IX
Operator SUEZ
Region Yorkshire and the Humber
Operational Capacity 135ktpa
Is site R1? Yes
When was R1 Granted? 2015-05-28
What was the R1 value 0.66
Electrical Capacity 9.50MWe
Number of Lines 1
Number of Turbines 1
CHP Yes
Technology Approach EfW Incineration
Funding Type PFI

Operators Annual Report


Input Data

Year HH C&I Clin RDF Total
2016 127510.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 127510.00
2017 132448.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 132448.00
2018 124477.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 124477.00
2019 129599.00 4066.00 278.00 0.00 133943.00
2020 121147.00 2739.00 343.00 0.00 124229.00
2021 132156.00 1652.00 775.00 0.00 134583.00
2022 118915.00 587.00 710.00 0.00 120212.00


Output Data

Year IBA IBA %ge of Tot IN APC APC %ge of Tot IN
2016 25528.00 20.02% 5114.00 4.01%
2017 26852.00 20.27% 4915.00 3.71%
2018 25074.00 20.14% 4713.00 3.79%
2019 26098.00 19.48% 5001.00 3.73%
2020 25794.00 20.76% 4441.00 3.57%
2021 47041.00 34.95% 8260.00 6.14%
2022 24055.00 20.01% 4058.00 3.38%

Summary

An EfW facility based upon conventional combustion technology and considered an ERF based on its R1 status. The Kirklees site has permitted operational capacity of 160,000 tonnes per annum, and is owned and operated by Suez. Delivery of waste is by road and the facility processes primarily residual Household Waste and some Commercial Waste.

History

The Kirklees facility, in Huddersfield, was built primarily to service Kirklees Metropolitan Council under a 25 year PFI contract, signed in 1998 and due for completion in 2023 - but with the option to extend for five years to 2028 (and potentially operate to 2036)[1].

Plant

The plant is assumed to have been built by Lentjes (renamed Lurgi in 2006 and sold to A-Tec Industries AG in 2007) under a turnkey contract with a similar approach to Allington EfW. The facility commenced operation in 2002. The plant is 1 line with a design capacity capable of 17 tonnes/hour equivalent to around 139,000 tonnes per annum. Electricity is generated via standard combustion technology, utiliziing fluidised bed technology ROWITEC, generating super-heated steam, and is configured to run on residual Household Waste and Commercial Waste). The technology is understood to be capable of operating in a range of CV of between 6.5 and 30.0 MJ/kg depending on configuration[2].

Local Authority Users

References