Noise of biomass plant a shock

Saturday 5th April 2008, 8:01AM BST.

LETTER – I visited the site of the Eccleshall biomass power plant on March 30, as I understand the Bishop’s Castle plant is to be similar.

Standing outside the fence I was not only horrified at the size of the plant, but the noise coming from it. There was also a light grey smoke coming from the chimney.

The plant is not working at full capacity at present and, should planning permission be given for the Bishop’s Castle plant, which is to be air cooled, it will mean even more noise.

I also noted that the door was open and I managed to question someone nearby. He said they had been told it was open because of the heat.

He also said the plant had not worked at full capacity above twice since its opening, to his knowledge, and thought it was something to do with the heat control, but remarked it was very difficult to obtain information.

An ordinary industry which closes for the night and at weekends would not be a problem, but in the quiet of the night and at weekends, this is definitely going to disturb people.

Broken sleep can cause illnesses, so with the threat of a constant noise approximately 200 yards away in Bishop’s Castle, this is a serious concern.

I would also like to add that Eccleshall still has problems, therefore would it not be wiser for the consortium not to build another plant until they have ironed out these problems.

Also the area in Bishop’s Castle is clearly signed as a Business Park. Businesses or light industry would be welcome to bring work, but not a huge incinerator.

Gill Lawler, Bishop’s Castle


  1. 1
    M. A. Dawes

    The original application for the plant at Eccleshall went in in August 2003. Since then it has grown by a factor of nearly 3 time in size and since it fired up in July last year has been unreliable and had to be shut down becuase of particulate emmission.
    It was supposed to burn miscanthus, but that is sold for co-firing at Drax.
    It has alledgedly burnt material from council waste skips a practice stopped according to the Environment Agency.
    Journalists have been told that the plant is too dangerous to visit.
    THIS PLANT MUST BE MADE TO OPERATE SAFELY WITH AN ACCEPTABLE SUSTAINABLE SOURCE OF FUEL FOR AN EXTENDED PERIOD BEFORE ANY FURTHER SIMILAR OPERATIONS ARE CONSIDERED SUCH AS AT BISHOP’S CASTLE OR TENBURY WELLS.

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  2. 2
    Brian

    With recommendations like that, it is hard to see why Telford & Wrekin Council are planning another one at Granville Country Park.

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  3. 3
    Michael Ryan

    Will the Bishops Castle group opposed to the biomass plant be getting Dr Dick van Steens=is to explain the health hazards at a public meeting in Bishops Castle, or do they plan to muddle on without him as best they can?

    The Scottish Environmental Protection Agency awoke from their slumber on health hazards of industrial PM2.5 emissions after Dr van Steenis was on the 6pm news on Scottish TV on 18 February 2008, talking about incinerators, and Viridor withdrew their application for a 450,000 tonnes per annum incinerator near Dunbar and several Scottish papers have reported the health concerns and also the U-turn by Viridor.

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