New waste plant is the way ahead
Environment Minister Richard Lochhead, with Avondale managing director Colin Cooper, carries out the official opening
Plans to divert 90 per cent of waste from a landfill site to a new £20 million facility were unveiled this week.
Avondale Environmental opened its state-of-the-art advanced waste treatment centre next to its landfill site in Polmont on Wednesday and has set a target of 2015 for the landfill diversion.
The materials recycling facility is capable of of processing 200,000 tonnes - the equivalent of all of Glasgow’s black bag waste - refuse that would previously have gone to landfill and will create 70 new jobs, with more to follow in the future.
It will also harvest materials like plastic, glass, metal and aluminium which can be sold on for re-use, while other waste such as paper can be used to power other energy-from-waste plants.
Doing the opening honours at the new site, Environment Minister Richard Lochhead said the centre was an important step to helping Scotland become a ‘Zero Waste’ nation by 2025.
The MSP added: “The future of waste management is not in landfill and I am pleased to see an operator such as Avondale investing in a solution that offers a genuine alternative for black bin bag waste.
“This new facility gives a final opportunity to recycle some of this material and produce energy from the rest.”
Around 60 per cent of the waste going through the facility will be diverted from landfill through recycling and developing fuels for energy production, while the plant will be powered by renewable electricity created by methane gas from the neighbouring landfill site.
Avondale managing director Colin Cooper said: “We are delighted to be delivering a nationally important recycling and fuel-from-waste facility.
“By providing an accessible facility in the heart of Scotland we can offer a responsible alternative to landfill. It is also good news for the local community as our workforce is set to grow over the coming months as we increase towards full production.”
Polmont resident and member of the Avondale Liaison Group Sandy Simpson welcomed the new centre as a positive boost for the environment and local community.
He said: “While Avondale has had problems with the landfill site, they do run things very well and are very open about the problems they have had over the past couple of years.
“This new site will help reduce waste going to the landfill site and will create jobs in the local community, which can only be a good thing at this moment in time.”
The centre is the first part of a project which will eventually feature a thermal drying facility producing high quality fuels and an advanced thermal treatment facility to produce even more renewable fuel, which will help divert 90 per cent of waste from landfill by 2015.
SEPA’s head of region for the east of Scotland, Lin Bunten, said: “The centre is a positive contribution towards Scotland’s Zero Waste ambitions.”
Depute convenor of Falkirk Council’s environment committee, Councillor Craig R. Martin, said the landfill diversion will save the local authority money. He added: “It’s a win-win for the council and the people of Falkirk.
“It brings 70 highly skilled jobs to the area when they are very much needed with plans to expand the site in future bringing more jobs. It saves the council money by diverting our waste away from landfill and makes the company money by turning our waste into resources.”
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Weather for Falkirk
Thursday 24 May 2012
Today
Sunny
Temperature: 14 C to 24 C
Wind Speed: 6 mph
Wind direction: North east
Tomorrow
Sunny
Temperature: 12 C to 24 C
Wind Speed: 17 mph
Wind direction: East



Comments
There are 3 comments to this article
Page 1 of 1
billybob
Monday, April 9, 2012 at 10:18 PMIt was great news that this plant was getting built and they stated that it was good for the area as it would give jobs locally,I have tried to get an application form but i cant find any one to assist me even at the job center,my son has also tried to get a job there but he keeps getting the run around,he was promised an interview and that they would phone him back ( which they did not ) he has constantley phoned and always gets the same answer,local people get the jobs I dont think so.
Blackcat
Tuesday, February 28, 2012 at 04:47 PMA magnificent opportunity for the Falkirk area. This will build on the excellent recycling initiative carried out by the Council by catching as much of the rest as can be separated, and then convert much of the rest to be reused, thus minimising the amount going to landfill. Definitely not just an incineration facility. Good news for all and adding the benefit of jobs in the area. I think there will be significant benefits to the wider economy in the falkirk area in the future, and environementally the right way forward thro a combination of all methods of reducing landfill.
MikePG
Friday, February 3, 2012 at 07:02 PMThis is an environmental horror story – Incineration is fundamentally unsustainable, recovering only a tenth of the energy used to make the products in our rubbish. This has a direct bearing on global warming, because 74% of man-made co2 emissions come from energy use. The Government is encouraging waste incineration by offering huge subsidies for the energy it produces. This is lunacy. Recycling waste saves four times more energy than incineration, but receives no subsidies. It is really no wonder companies are queuing up to build waste incinerators, but no-one wants to build recycling plants.
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