Tyseley Energy from Waste Plant

The Birmingham Energy Recovery facility

Tyseley Energy Recovery Facility is a waste incineration plant in Birmingham, UK. It is run by Veolia.

It was built in 1996 by Veolia to a design by Faulks Perry Culley & Rech.[1] The plant has become a notable building in Birmingham with a lighting scheme that illuminates the plant during the hours of darkness. It was built to comply with the European emissions standards that came into force in 1996. Veolia benefits from Levy Exemption Certificates for the element of energy which is produced from renewable sources. This provides income to the City Council. The plant was opposed by Birmingham Friends of the Earth for contributing to climate change, causing air pollution and reducing recycling rates in the city.[2]

The ERF operates 24 hours a day for 365 days a year (except for planned shutdowns for maintenance). It takes around 350,000 tonnes of waste produced by the city annually and burns it along with natural gas to produce electricity, of which 25MW is fed into the National Grid.[3] It is a two-stream plant with each boiler designed to process 23.5 tonnes of rubbish per hour. It has a turbo-generator which exports 25MW to the National Grid, after providing for on-site needs. The ERF also recovers several thousand tonnes a year of ferrous metals for recycling from the process.

References

  1. Phillips, Derek (2000). Lighting Modern Buildings. Architectural Press. pp. 136–7. ISBN 0-7506-4082-0.
  2. Birmingham’s Big Burner, Birmingham Friends of the Earth
  3. Plant details

External links

Coordinates: 52°27′35″N 1°50′38″W / 52.4598°N 1.8439°W / 52.4598; -1.8439

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 1/22/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.