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Council asked to back £917m recycling scheme



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Published Date: 25 June 2008
WASTE is going to become more expensive for us all.
Lincolnshire County Council members will be asked today, Wednesday, to back a scheme costing £917m over 28 years to help meet new recycling targets.

The plan includes building an ‘Energy from Waste’ unit - a combined heat and power plant to genera
te electricity for sale to the national grid and heat in the form of steam for sale locally.

A report prepared for the meeting said: “The new directive requires that the council significantly reduces the amount of biodegradable waste that it landfills, which means that the council must find an alternative solution.”

The report said the plant would take three years to build and would operate for 25 years, using waste that remained after recycling to create energy for sale.

The total cost of running the plant and other waste services would be £917m over the 28 years but only £625m had been budgeted for.

There might be some funding from Defra and income should come from the sale of electricity, but that still left a potential shortfall estimated to be between £185m and £323m – referred to as the ‘affordability gap’.

Councillors will today be recommended to agree to ‘increasing funding over the 28-year period to bridge this gap’.



The full article contains 217 words and appears in Horncastle News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 24 June 2008 2:35 PM
  • Source: Horncastle News
  • Location: Horncastle
 
 
  

 
 


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