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Waste
which isn’t separated for recycling or composting
by the householder will be used to recover energy.
It will be processed through an energy recovery
facility which will burn the rubbish under highly
controlled conditions, recovering heat energy to
generate electricity.
The energy recovery process
Waste is fed onto a grate where
it is fully burned. The resulting bottom ash passes
through a handling system where metals are extracted
for recycling. The remaining ash is then sent for
recycling within the construction industry and/or
disposal. Hot gases produced in the combustion process
are cooled in a boiler which then produces steam.
A turbo-generator uses the steam to produce electricity
for export to the local grid. The gases from the
boiler go through an extensive flue gas cleaning
process. This produces a residue, which is sent
to a controlled licensed landfill. The cleaned gases
are finally released to the atmosphere through the
chimney.
Download
our leaflet to find out more
Energy Recovery in Hampshire
In Hampshire, Veolia Environmental Services already
operates three modern Energy Recovery Facilities:
this video tells the story of how the company has
managed Hampshire's waste since 1996 through recycling,
composting and energy recovery and shows how its
Chineham Energy Recovery Facility was developed.
Please note this movie is 13mb so will take
a while to load on some connections
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Veolia
Environmental Services Plc, Freeman House,
Ellen Street, Portslade, East Sussex BN41 1DW
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Tel:
01273 410231 |
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Waste Strategy |
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To
avoid the use of landfill and increase recycling
and
recovery via:
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Reduce
and reuse initiatives |
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Sorting
of dry recyclables |
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Composting
of
green garden waste |
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Energy
Recovery |
Currently about 26% of
the area’s waste is recycled (2005/2006
data). The rest is landfilled. In time we hope
to achieve the same levels as the best recyclers
in Europe.
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