Waste and bioenergy
Announcements prior to September 2017, including this announcement, occurred under previous ownership.
28 July 2016
GIB is investing £80m in a new £340m CHP plant in Kent
The plant will generate electricity for the grid and heat for Kemsley Paper Mill in Kent
The plant is also expected to help reduce greenhouse gas emissions by over 163,000 tonnes per year and prevent around half-a-million tonnes of waste from going to landfill
The facility is expected to generate up to 154 GWh of renewable electricity annually, enough to power 37,500 homes
Once complete, the 43 MW plant will supply renewable electricity to the grid and renewable heat to DS Smith’s Kemsley Paper Mill, which produces sustainable packaging for the retail industry.
The plant is expected to help decarbonise the production process by replacing part of the mill’s gas-fired steam supply and support the UK government’s increasing efforts to cut carbon emissions from the manufacturing sector.
The project developer, Wheelabrator Technologies Inc (WTI), has secured more than £300m of debt from a lending club that includes GIB alongside Barclays, Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ (BTMU), Natixis and Investec.
The plant becomes the first large-scale energy from waste facility supported by the Contract for Difference (CfD) mechanism. It is expected to generate up to 154 GWh of renewable electricity annually once fully operational – equivalent to the power consumed by 37,500 homes – and 180 GWH of renewable heat.
Displacing fossil fuels in heat and power production, the facility is also expected to help reduce greenhouse gas emissions by over 163,000 tonnes per year – equivalent to removing 75,000 cars from the road for the lifetime of the project – and prevent around half-a-million tonnes of waste from going to landfill per annum.
Constructions industrielles de la Méditerranée S.A. (CNIM) has been awarded the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract for the project. WTI will manage the operations and maintenance (O&M) of the plant.
Around 500 jobs are expected to be created during the construction phase, with the plant expected to support around 40 full-time operational roles upon completion.
Waste will be supplied by a number of local and national waste management companies. The plant is expected to come online in 2019.
Greg Clark
Business and Energy Secretary
Shaun Kingsbury
Chief Executive, GIB
Paul Green
Managing Director, Wheelabrator
Hugo Fisher
Group Communications Director, DS Smith
Total GIB share of investment: £80m
Total capital mobilised: £340m
Co-investors: Barclays, Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ (BTMU), Natixis and Investec
Expected date of completion: 2019
Developer: Wheelabrator Technologies Inc (WTI)
EPC contractor: Constructions industrielles de la Méditerranée S.A. (CNIM)
O&M: Wheelabrator Technologies Inc (WTI)
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