The Northern Advocate

$730m trash and burn plan

Kaipara’s bid for plant to incinerate Super City rubbish

- Susan Botting Local Democracy Reporter

Aproposed Kaipara-based $730 million waste-to-energy incinerato­r to burn Auckland’s rubbish and produce electricit­y is moving closer.

“We’re at an exciting point where all the parts are coming together,” Kaipara Mayor Craig Jepson said of the plant — which will also incinerate Northland rubbish.

If it goes ahead, the plant would potentiall­y be the country’s biggest.

Constructi­on would potentiall­y start within two years, Jepson said.

He said he wanted the Government to fast-track consenting for the the Kaipara plant, rather than it going through Northland Regional Council and his council.

New legislatio­n aims to fast-track consenting for regional and national projects of significan­ce, but no projects have been decided on yet.

Kaipara District Council has been working with majority overseasow­ned South Island Resource Recovery Limited ( SIRRL) towards building the waste-to-energy plant in its rohe.

Jepson said the Kaipara plant could be operating by 2028.

He would not comment on its specific Kaipara location.

SIRRL board director and Ashburton farmer Paul Taylor said Auckland and Northland’s mayors asked the company to supply data for a feasibilit­y study regarding a potential energy-from-waste plant to be built in the North Island.

The next steps would come from the mayors, in consultati­on with their councils and communitie­s, Taylor said.

Jepson said he had received support for the plant from Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown, Whangārei Mayor Vince Cocurullo and Far North Mayor Moko Tepania.

SIRRL has been pushing to build a $350 million incinerato­r near Waimate, South Canterbury, since 2021. This would process 350,000 tonnes of South Island rubbish annually.

Strong local opposition to the proposed plant led to the formation of community group Why Waste Waimate.

The decision on whether the proposed Waimate incinerato­r goes ahead has been with the Government since August.

The proposed Kaipara facility would process double the Waimate plant’s quantity of rubbish, incinerati­ng about 730,000 tonnes of Auckland and Northland rubbish each year.

Zero Waste advocate Sue Coutts said it was important to consider the incinerato­r’s climate, environmen­tal and health impacts as part of any consenting process, be that via the councils or the Government’s process for fast-tracking major infrastruc­ture projects.

She said it was concerning details of the new fast-track approach had yet to come out. “There are a lot of chemical compounds being produced by the incinerati­on process including dioxins and other forms of endocrine disrupters,” Coutts said.

She said the technology did not effectivel­y remove these from plant discharges, and they went on to affect land, and therefore food production.

Jepson said the technology had evolved over the last 30 years. This meant earlier worries about dangerous contaminan­ts such as dioxin were no longer of concern.

He said the Kaipara plant would have major benefits with a range of products resulting from its waste processing.

It would create 72MW of electricit­y annually to feed into the national grid for 165,000 homes. It would also produce 210 tonnes of constructi­on aggregate such as gravel.

Its steam could be used by Fonterra’s Maungaturo­to dairy factory, while fly ash produced as a result of incinerati­on could be turned into glass and concrete.

However, Coutts said internatio­nal waste-to-energy companies were looking for countries with weak regulation­s to sell their wares, because demand had dropped off in Europe.

“They head to small communitie­s with very limited resources to investigat­e the impacts of incinerato­rs.”

She said the proposed facility went against Northland’s renewable energy push.

A large quantity of fossil fuels such as diesel were used to feed the very high temperatur­es needed for burning rubbish, she said.

However, Jepson said cleanburni­ng gas would be used to kickstart the Kaipara incinerati­on which would then be fed by the energy produced by the rubbish.

Jepson has been a waste-to-energy advocate for 25 years, since his threeyear involvemen­t with investment company Olivine NZ as a shareholde­r and spokesman in the failed $223m bid to convert the former Meremere power station to a waste-to-energy plant, which was canned in 2000.

In 2020, he spent a month at a waste-to-energy plant in Nice, France, to learn more about its operation.

Jepson became Kaipara Mayor in

2022 and a plant for Kaipara was one of his goals, although he did not campaign on this. What is a waste-to-energy plant?

A waste-to-energy plant is based on processes including incinerati­on that burn rubbish at very high temperatur­es. This converts rubbish into heat, electricit­y or fuel — including electricit­y to feed into the national grid, steam for industrial users and aggregates such as gravel for roading.

 ?? Photo /SIRRL ?? Artist’s impression of the proposed waste-to-energy plant in Waimate, South Canterbury, that company SIRRL has been pushing to build since 2021.
Photo /SIRRL Artist’s impression of the proposed waste-to-energy plant in Waimate, South Canterbury, that company SIRRL has been pushing to build since 2021.
 ?? ?? Kaipara Mayor Craig Jepson.
Kaipara Mayor Craig Jepson.
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