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Fire risk fears renewed before Rockliffe 'gasification' plant decision
Fire risk fears renewed before Rockliffe 'gasification' plant decision

BBC News

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  • General
  • BBC News

Fire risk fears renewed before Rockliffe 'gasification' plant decision

Residents have raised fresh concerns about plans for a plant that would use rubbish to produce gas, ahead of a planning decision on the scheme being made on have obtained inspection reports from the Environment Agency (EA), seen by the BBC, some of which allege environmental breaches and increased fire risk at North West Recycling's (NWR) waste processing compound near Carlisle in recent proposed plant in Rockcliffe, which would generate electricity, would be part of the same firm pointed to recent EA reports which showed previous fire safety concerns had been addressed and said the project would have "no impact on human health or the environment". A large fire broke out at the waste site in 2021. Documents obtained by the BBC last year revealed EA inspectors, who attended at the time of the fire, alleged NWR had breached regulations on the storage of waste, resulting in a significant fire company denied the allegations and was not prosecuted over the blaze, which was deemed living nearby said the documents raised questions over the safety of the proposed "gasification" has said it would heat commercial and industrial waste such as film plastic and paper that cannot be recycled, so that they break down into a type of gas made up of hydrogen, carbon monoxide and other gas would then be burned to generate electricity for the site and the wider grid, according to the facility's environmental permit. But some people in the Rockcliffe area are worried about pollution and fire Story, a farmer who lives near the site, said "the air was thick" and "everything was noxious" when the 2021 fire said a similar incident, if a new gasification plant was built, would not be a "winning combination". Using Environmental Information Regulations, local opponents of the scheme have obtained more than 20 reports following inspections of NWR by the EA, dating from 2020 to late of the documents allege breaches of the company's environmental permit and the site's fire prevention plan at various Mudge, from Carlisle, sent some of the files to Cumberland Council, when it was considering whether to issue a new environmental permit for the proposed gasification plant. 'Endangering human health' Mr Mudge argued the reports cast doubt on whether the operator would abide by the conditions of any new permit and, therefore, that it should not be the council awarded the permit in April."How can the council be confident this site's going to comply with conditions when you see this record of endangering human health and unsafe fire practices?" Mr Mudge Bamber, on behalf of NWR, did not comment directly on the alleged breaches but pointed to an inspection report from last September and one from April that did not record any said the EA "consider NWR to be a competent and compliant waste management company", supported by the fact the agency had not objected to the gasification project. Mr Bamber said the company had commissioned a number of reports on the scheme's impact and the council's ecologist and Natural England had not raised any Council said it "engaged specialist independent consultants to review key aspects of the proposal and listened carefully to the advice of key specialist government bodies" before granting the environmental added it was "firmly committed" to protecting the public and had no grounds to believe the operator would not comply with the on Cumberland's planning committee are expected to decide whether the gasification plant will get planning permission on Friday, with officers recommending approval. Follow BBC Cumbria on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.

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