Yorkshire Post

Inland port bid to bring vital freight into city

- ROB PARSONS POLITICAL EDITOR

VITAL FREIGHT materials needed for flagship projects such as the Leeds South Bank and High Speed 2 could be delivered into the city by water rather than road if a £3.4m “inland port” scheme gets the go-ahead.

The new wharf facility proposed in the Stourton area would allow non-perishable freight such as aggregates, timber, oil and steel to be moved from the Humber estuary via the Aire and Calder Navigation, the canal sections of the Rivers Aire and Calder.

The developmen­t on three acres of land owned by the Canal and River Trust would include a concrete apron with 80 metres of thick boards known as ‘sheet piling’ for boats to moor against, as well as dredging of the waterway to make it easier to navigate.

The trust, which is behind the project, aims to complete the constructi­on 18 months from funding being formally awarded and move 200,000 tonnes of freight from road to water in the first year.

By doing so, officials hope carbon emissions from road vehicles will be cut by 100 tonnes within three years and create as many as 16 jobs. The project has outline planning permission, but this expired in April so the trust hopes to submit another applicatio­n next month, in the hope that it will approved by Leeds City Council by October.

The West Yorkshire Combined Authority has agreed to move the scheme forward, meaning an outline business case, and provide £3.17m in funding once a costed full business case has been prepared. The Canal and Rivers Trust is providing £200,000.

Among the high-profile schemes that the project could help are the much-anticipate­d revitalisa­tion of the Leeds South Bank, the new station for the city required for the HS2 rail line and the regenerati­on of Hunslet Riverside.

It would also help improve transport connection­s between east and west in northern England, one of the main issues identified by transport chiefs as holding the region back.

According to a report by the authority, water-borne freight “has been in decline since the proliferat­ion of motorways, which quickly became a more commercial­ly viable opportunit­y for freight carriers”.

It said: “Due to increased congestion, however, freight on water is again becoming an attractive propositio­n for certain goods. There are already wharf facilities on the Aire & Calder Navigation that are already in use, but the trust’s ambition is to bring freight back into Leeds city centre.

“Work completed to date by the Canal & River Trust and Transport for the North has revealed that there is a demand to move cargoes such as aggregates, timber, oil and steel by water. Delivering a fit-for-purpose wharf in Leeds could make this a reality.

“Given the pressures that Leeds City Region is currently facing around traffic congestion and air quality, the use of waterborne freight could bring both commercial, environmen­tal and health benefits.”

 ??  ?? More than 6,000 schoolchil­dren aged between seven and 11 including Anneli Hart, eight, have enjoyed activities and demonstrat­ions about food, farming and the countrysid­e during two Countrysid­e Days this week at the Great Yorkshire Showground in...
More than 6,000 schoolchil­dren aged between seven and 11 including Anneli Hart, eight, have enjoyed activities and demonstrat­ions about food, farming and the countrysid­e during two Countrysid­e Days this week at the Great Yorkshire Showground in...

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