North Yorkshire consumed with enthusiasm for EfW plant

 
A new energy-from-waste ‘pyrolysis’ plant in North Yorkshire will convert 18,000t of household waste a year into enough electricity to supply more than 2,000 homes.
North Yorkshire County Council last week gave the go ahead for the pyrolysis plant at the Seamer Carr landfill site near Scarborough. The proposal was put forward by Yorwaste, a waste-management company, part-owned by the council. The pyrolysis plant will take around 54% of the household waste generated by communities in the Scarborough and Ryedale districts.
Gordon Gresty, North Yorkshire County Council’s director of business and environmental services, said: ‘This is one of a several technologies being introduced to reduce the amount of waste material which is buried. It demonstrates the council’s commitment to recycling and reusing waste material, where possible.’
The council’s planning committee approved the application with some conditions. The plant will convert the waste into a gas known as ‘syngas’, which will be used to power a generator delivering more than 2MW of electricity a year into the national grid.

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