Sunderland Echo

New £3m hub is Quay to company’s growth

- Kevin Clark kevin.clark@jpimedia.co.uk @sunderland­echo

A new £3m fertiliser facility is helping the port of Sunderland to bloom.

The distributi­on and storage hub has officially opened its doors after around five years in the planning.

The terminal will see Brineflow Ltd distribute liquid fertiliser­s to farmers between the Humber and Forth, creating around half a dozen jobs and breathing new commercial life into disused land at the port’s Youngs Quay.

Chairman John Fuller OBE, said: “Sunderland is perfectly placed to service the market from Scotland down to the Humber and across to the west coast and dovetails perfectly with our Norfolk terminals.

"We can now access over 90% of the UK. The opening of our new North East hub at such a critical mid-point on the east coast will see Brineflow become a truly national company and will help us further increase our share of the UK’s ever-growing liquid fertiliser market.”

The move would help the

UK agricultur­al industry to become more environmen­tally-friendly.

“Over recent years, the market for liquid nitrogen fertiliser­s has been increasing rapidly as farmers the worldover race to become net-zero, leading to a surge in demand for our products from companies across the UK,” he said.

“Thanks to our investment in Port of Sunderland, there will no longer be a need for double handling or using single-use plastics, we’ll have complete environmen­tal containmen­t. In fact, the first time our fertiliser­s see the atmosphere will be when they emerge from the farmer’s spray nozzle in the field.

“With fewer steps, lower emission and zero waste, our new terminal will allow farmers to reduce their Total Environmen­tal Impact by around a fifth compared to traditiona­lly used fertiliser­s.”

Brineflow vowed to use local North East suppliers throughout developmen­t of the hub, saying: “We made a commitment right at the beginning to ensure that every pound we spent on the developmen­t of the new hub was a pound that went right back into the local economy.

“This meant using local architects and civil engineers, right the way through to procuring local contractor­s for the constructi­on and fit-out.”

The first phase will allow the company to store 9,010 tonnes of liquid nitrogen fertiliser, however planning permission has already been secured for the developmen­t of further space that would increase capacity four-fold.

And he paid tribute to the port and Sunderland City Council for their efforts to secure the deal.

“We knew that, in order to fulfil our goal of being as economical­ly and environmen­tally

sustainabl­e as possible, we’d need local knowledge to provide the attention to detail required and the council and the team at the Port delivered that in spades.”

City council leader Cllr Graeme Miller, said: “As a city, we made a commitment last year to become carbon neutral by 2040 and we’re absolutely thrilled to see Brineflow – a company which shares our passion for tackling climate change - investing in the Port of Sunderland.

“We’re delighted to have supported Brineflow and look forward to working with them long into the future.”

 ?? ?? Brineflow chair John Fuller OBE, left, Sunderland City Council leader Cllr Graeme Miller, centre, and Port of Sunderland director Matthew Hunt.
Brineflow chair John Fuller OBE, left, Sunderland City Council leader Cllr Graeme Miller, centre, and Port of Sunderland director Matthew Hunt.
 ?? ?? The new Brineflow fertiliser station opens at Port of Sunderland.
The new Brineflow fertiliser station opens at Port of Sunderland.

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