Bangor Mail

Quarry in bid to extend its workings until 2038

- Gareth Williams

AQUARRY operator has applied to extend the lifespan of a slate quarry – and says it would protect jobs in a Gwynedd town.

Cwt y Bugail quarry at Manod Mawr, Blaenau Ffestiniog, is one of a handful still in operation across North Wales and currently employs 45 people.

But with the current planning permission to extract the site set

to expire in three years, Welsh Slate has now applied to Gwynedd Council to allow an extension until 2038. According to Welsh Slate, which has submitted a Scoping Opinion Applicatio­n in preparatio­n for a full planning applicatio­n down the line, it’s envisaged current operations would continue as they are and would protect the jobs of those already working at the site.

Cwt Y Bugail, also known as Graig Ddu, has been quarried and mined since the early 19th century and until the 1940s the site comprised two separate undertakin­gs, the Manod Slate Mine to the east and the Graig Ddu Quarry to the west.

Any blasting is currently restricted to between 8am and 8pm, with no extension to these hours being proposed.

The planning statement submitted by Welsh Slate, notes: “The prospectiv­e applicant is minded to submit a planning applicatio­n for the continuati­on of slate extraction operations, together with the deposit of mineral wastes and overburden within the quarry workings beyond the current cessation date of 31st December 2022.

“The proposed developmen­t represents a continuati­on of the existing quarrying operations. The quarry has been in existence for a number of years and currently employs personnel directly.

“This employment provides indirect effects through increased spending in the area on goods and services.

“As the proposals do not fundamenta­lly change the existing situation then it is difficult to predict any significan­t effects arising.

“The proposals would not seek to laterally extend either the slateworki­ngs or associated around 45 tips beyond the current approved footprint and operations would continue at the same level of intensity as current. Moreover, all tipping operations would be undertaken within the current operationa­l tip on the western side of the quarry or within the quarry void.”

It’s expected Gwynedd council planning officers will respond before a full applicatio­n is submitted.

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 ??  ?? ■ An aerial View of Cwt y Bugail Quarry
■ An aerial View of Cwt y Bugail Quarry

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