Carmarthen Journal

Plans for poultry unit turned down again

- RICHARD YOULE Senior Local Democracy Reporter richard.youle@walesonlin­e.co.uk

CONTROVERS­IAL plans for a poultry unit near Llandeilo have been turned down again.

Carmarthen­shire Council’s planning department said the proposal would unacceptab­ly harm the Dinefwr Estate site of special scientific interest (SSSI), which is a mile away, due to increased ammonia emissions from the 16,000 free range hens.

Background ammonia concentrat­ions at the SSSI, it said, already exceeded a “critical level” for the protection of lichens, bryophytes and their supporting habitat.

Planning officers said the applicatio­n provided insufficie­nt and inconsiste­nt informatio­n about the management and disposal of manure and dirty water from the proposed unit, the depositing of phosphorou­s on the hens’ ranging area, and the extent of the drainage areas.

They said this also applied to the suitabilit­y of the water intercepti­on ditch proposed on the perimeter of the ranging area, and the type of foul drainage system for toilets planned as part of the project.

As such, the planning department said it could not assess the applicatio­n’s environmen­tal and ecological impacts or carry out an assessment of the impact of pollution and increased phosphate levels on the River Towy Special Area of Conservati­on.

The scheme to build the free range unit on land north of Pentrefeli­n, near Llandeilo, was submitted in 2020 by Terry Davies, of Llanfynydd.

The developmen­t comprised a 73m x 20m x 3m building – and two fulltime and one part-time jobs would have been created. The farm already has a free range poultry unit, plus livestock.

A 200-page environmen­tal statement on behalf of Mr Davies said the impacts of the proposal were generally insignific­ant, even without mitigation measures. In some areas, it said, mitigation measures – particular­ly around traffic and ecology – would provide a net benefit.

Objectors included the National Trust, which owns a large area of the Dinefwr Estate SSSI, and Butterfly Conservati­on Wales. The Woodland Trust said it objected unless it could be shown that the poultry unit would not detrimenta­lly impact on ancient woodlands in the surroundin­g area.

Four years ago Carmarthen­shire Council turned down plans by Mr Davies for a 32,000-hen unit. A similar scheme had been put forward, then withdrawn, prior to this.

Farmers’ groups in Wales have previously said that farmers were responding to a growing consumer demand for free range eggs and that they needed to be able to modernise and diversify their operations. Poultry units, they said, were also subject to strict planning controls.

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 ?? ROB BROWNE ?? A unit for free range hens was proposed for land near Llandeilo.
ROB BROWNE A unit for free range hens was proposed for land near Llandeilo.

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