Council rejects £35m Consett incinerator plans

Durham County

Durham County Council’s planning committee voted unanimously to refuse the £35m plan

A controversial plan which objectors feared would blot a beautiful North East landscape with a 50m-high chimney stack has been rejected.

Project Genesis Ltd’s proposal to build an energy-from-waste facility on former steel works land at Hownsgill Industrial Park, Templetown, Consett was refused yesterday.

Durham County Council’s planning committee voted unanimously to refuse the £35m plan.

The scheme had drawn more than 3,500 objections, with nine letters in support.

The energy plant would have operated 24 hours a day treating up to 60,000 tonnes of waste per year, leading to 22 HGV movements per weekday, bringing nine full-time jobs.

The developers have argued it would stop rubbish from being buried in landfill sites for generations to come and generate cheap, environmentally friendly power.

But a number of councillors and campaigners spoke against the proposal. A video from campaign group Say No To Consett Incinerator showing residents expressing their concerns, and a campaign rap track from Con Dawg N Crew, were played to the planning meeting.

Campaigner Christine Thomas said: Basically, we don’t need an incinerator, and we don’t want one. The incinerator could rob our community of one of its greatest assets. This kind of industry should not be at the heart on Consett. It no longer belongs there.

Cllr Kathryn Rooney, for Consett North, said: I can count on one hand the number of people in favour of the incinerator. Those against know that this will destroy the local environment. Raising concerns about noise, pollution and traffic, she said: The glorious vistas from around the town and beyond will be dominated by the 50m-high chimney.

She added: An incinerator not only hampers the town’s regeneration but throws it squarely in the past. It would absolutely dominate the landscape of Consett and become an absolute blot on the landscape. Why would you want to bring something so unpopular to our home town?

Planning officers considered possible harm from emissions and found the plant could operate safely.

But senior planning officer Chris Shields said the scale of the development would cause a significant and unacceptable landscape impact.

He said the visual impact of the plant – standing much taller than surrounding buildings and becoming part of the backdrop to a Grade II listed High Knitsley Farmhouse – would also be unacceptable.

He added they did not accept it was a renewable energy development.

He told councillors: It is considered that the tangible public benefits of the proposal are not sufficient to outweigh the heritage harm that would result from the development being approved.

It was argued on the developer’s behalf that the “small scale” plan would be a catalyst for more investment, it would be on an industrial estate and would be screened from most views.

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