Utility Week

Utility Week 29th June 2018

Utility Week - authoritative, impartial and essential reading for senior people within utilities, regulators and government

Issue link: https://fhpublishing.uberflip.com/i/998219

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 18 of 31

UTILITY WEEK | 29TH JUNE - 5TH JULY 2018 | 19 contribute significantly to the recycling of 94 per cent of Leeds' sewage sludge. The facility will be capable of processing up to 131 tonnes of dry sludge a day and will generate enough renewable energy, using heat and power engines, to provide 55 per cent of Knostrop's energy needs. Yorkshire Water project manager Lee Laherty said: "This is the single biggest investment the company is making between 2015 and 2020. The installa- tion is a huge deal because we can start creating more electricity for ourselves, as well as do more to reduce carbon emissions and help the environment." If you have an asset or project you would like to see featured in this slot, please send pictures and details of the project to: alicecooke@fav-house.com. Operations & Assets FACTFILE: YORKSHIRE WATER AND KNOSTROP Knostrop wastewater treatment works has been treating sewage from domestic properties and industry for around 100 years. Construction of the Knostrop Sludge Treatment Facility represents Yorkshire Water's single biggest investment of the current AMP6 investment period (2015-20). The new cutting-edge facility will replace the existing sludge and bio-solid incinerator, which was built in 1993. Once operational, it will generate renewable power from the wastewater effluent as well as treating the waste to the highest modern standards. The company was recently awarded platinum status in the Business in the Community environment index for its green-focused work in the area. 1.24 billion Yorkshire Water manages the collection, treatment and distribution of water in the region, supplying around 1.24 billion litres of drinking water to more than five million people every day 700+ The company relies on a network of more than 700 treatment works and 130 reservoirs 62,000 The number of miles of mains needed to transport water around Yorkshire 80,000 The number of acres of land owned by Yorkshire Water, which makes it the second-largest landowner in the county 2,500 The number of Yorkshire Water employees £3.8 billion The amount the company has pledged to put back into the local economy between 2015 and 2020 94% The amount of Leeds' sewage sludge that will be able to be recycled once the Knostrop facility is complete 131 tonnes The amount of dry sludge the facility will be able to process each day 55% The amount of its own electricity needs Knostrop will be able to generate – the equivalent of providing power to 8,000 homes 15% The reduction in the site's carbon emissions as a result

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Utility Week - Utility Week 29th June 2018