Environment Agency grants permit to Wisbech incinerator


Image source, MVV Environment

Image caption, MVV Environment wants to build the waste-to-energy incinerator on the Algores Way industrial estate in Wisbech

  • Author, Kate Moser Andon
  • Role, BBC News, Cambridgeshire

A £300m waste incinerator has been granted an environmental permit.

The Environment Agency issued the document on Wednesday for MVV Environment’s incinerator at Wisbech, Cambridgeshire, close to the Norfolk border.

MVV Environment’s managing director Paul Carey said he was “clearly pleased” with the outcome.

However, campaigners said it would contribute to pollution and traffic in the area.

Image source, Emma Baugh/BBC

Image caption, Protesters opposed to the incinerator said it would increase lorry traffic in the town

MVV wants to build the waste-to-energy incinerator on the Algores Way industrial estate in the Fenland town.

The project was granted development consent in February, but in April was impacted by a temporary ban on permits for new incinerator plants in England.

The Environment Agency said it would only issue a permit if it believed harm to the environment, people and wildlife would be minimised and that the operator had the ability to meet its conditions.

Permit conditions

The Environment Agency’s permit allows a capacity of up to 625,600 tonnes a year, including non-hazardous household, commercial and industrial waste.

The body imposed a number of conditions on MVV, including maintaining records of the raw materials and water it used.

MVV must set up a written management system that “identifies and minimises risks of pollution”.

Image source, Environment Agency

Image caption, MVV Environment said more than £300m would be spent on the project

Every five years it must monitor groundwater, and soil every 10 years. Any emissions must be free from odour “at levels likely to cause pollution outside the site”.

MVV Environment said more than £300m would be spent on the project, creating 700 jobs initially during the three-year build and 40 full-time skilled jobs once it was up and running.

Mr Carey said: “We’re clearly pleased that the permit has now been awarded according to the due process.

“We want to assure the local community that we will be a good neighbour as we build and operate the new facility, as we have already demonstrated at our facilities in Plymouth and Dundee.”

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