Wilton 11 EfW

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Suez-Semcorp EFW
Suez-Semcorp EFW


Wilton 11 EfW
Operational
Site Location
Site Location

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

Waste Licence XP3436WB
Operator SUEZ
Region North East
Operational Capacity 500ktpa
Is site R1? Yes
When was R1 Granted? 2016-02-24
What was the R1 value 0.83
Electrical Capacity 49.00MWe
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 410778.00 55207.00 0.00 1408.00 467393.00
2019 397135.00 45042.00 0.00 5468.00 447886.00
2020 463975.00 3309.00 0.00 2277.00 470226.00
2021 456892.00 1667.00 0.00 175.00 458860.00
2022 351878.00 3088.00 0.00 129.00 356191.00


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 89464.35 0.00% 8836.10 0.00%
2018 108245.00 23.16% 10184.00 2.18%
2019 104948.00 23.43% 9710.00 2.17%
2020 114173.00 24.28% 9287.00 1.98%
2021 108601.00 23.67% 8600.00 1.87%
2022 82370.00 23.13% 6874.00 1.93%

Summary

An EfW facility based upon conventional combustion technology and considered an ERF based on its R1 status. Wilton 11 has permitted operational capacity of 444,000 tonnes per annum, and is owned by a joint venture between Suez and Sembcorp and operated by Suez. Delivery of waste is primarily by rail and the facility processes primarily residual Household Waste and some Commercial Waste[1].

History

The Wilton 11 facility was built primarily to service a 30 year PPP contract signed in April 2013 with Merseyside [2], with anticipated input of 440,000 tonnes per annum i.e the majority of the tonnage. of the total design capacity of 350,000 tonnes per annum - receiving additional residual Commercial Waste. It is located in Cardiff bay and has been operational since 2014.

Plant

Built by CNIM and Clugson construction started in 2014 and completed 2016which started in Spring 2012 and was delivered in 2014[3] at a reported [4] £206m 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.

History

Plant

Local Authority Users

References