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Black & Veatch engaged to complete Energy Works Hull commissioning

Energy Works Hull (EWH), one of the largest energy-from-waste (EfW) facilities of its kind in the UK, has engaged the global engineering firm Black & Veatch (B&V) as Principal Contractor to oversee its final stages of commissioning. The move to engage Black & Veatch follows the decision in March by shareholders of EWH, who include Bioenergy Infrastructure Group (BIG) and Noy Fund, to terminate MW High Tech Projects UK Ltd's engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) contract.

A 24 MWe combined heat and power (CHP) enabled gasification plant, Energy Works Hull will make an important contribution to the sustainable management of Hull’s household and industrial waste by diverting up to 240 000 tonnes per annum from landfill. At its peak, over 500 people were employed during the construction phase and a further 25 jobs will follow in the operational phase. More jobs are being supported in the supply chain (photo courtesy BIG).

A 24 MWe combined heat and power (CHP) enabled gasification plant, Energy Works Hull will make an important contribution to the sustainable management of Hull’s household and industrial waste by diverting up to 240 000 tonnes per annum from landfill. At its peak, over 500 people were employed during the construction phase and a further 25 jobs will follow in the operational phase. More jobs are being supported in the supply chain (photo courtesy BIG).

The move to engage Black & Veatch follows the decision in March by shareholders of EWH, who include Bioenergy Infrastructure Group (BIG) and Noy, to terminate MW High Tech Projects UK Ltd’s engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) contract. BIG recently announced that Ince Bio Power, its facility near Ellesmere Port in Cheshire that uses similar technology as EWH, is fully operational.

Black & Veatch has demonstrated both technical capability and organisational commitment to the renewable energy industry, including as a lead contractor at our Ince Bio Power project in Cheshire, and we are delighted to have brought them on board in Hull. This represents very good news not only for this facility but for the city of Hull. We have regenerated a brownfield site, will be enabling other local businesses to reduce their carbon footprint, and will be providing clean energy to the local grid, said Hamish McPherson, CEO of BIG.

Ince Bio Power is currently the largest advanced conversion technology (ACT) facility in the UK but will be overtaken by EWH once the Hull plant is fully operational. ACT – a form of gasification – is a clean alternative to incineration that turns waste into a combustible gas by heating it in a low oxygen environment. Another BIG facility, the smaller Levenseat plant in Lanarkshire, Scotland, also utilises ACT technology.

Black & Veatch are pleased to be supporting Bioenergy Infrastructure Group to oversee the final stages of commissioning of the Energy Works Hull (EWH) project, said Peter Hughes, Director of Business Development – Europe, Black & Veatch.

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