Waste recycles into 5,000 jobs
Ben Rooth
20/12/2008
FIVE-thousand jobs are to be created in a £3bn deal to revolutionise the way Greater Manchester deals with waste.
The money would pay for a massive construction programme, including five biological treatment plants using special bacteria where rubbish would be converted into electricity to power 10,000 homes.
Gas which can be used to generate electricity is created as the waste is broken down.
Three other sites would be built where rubbish normally destined for landfill would be compacted and packaged for recycling, while four new composting sites would process hundreds of thousands of tons of garden and food waste every year.
Seventeen of the region's 25 household recycling centres would also be refurbished. The package will be worth £3bn over 25 years and create 5,000 jobs in construction - on top of the extra 100 staff needed to run the new sites.
Experts claim it would give Greater Manchester some of the best waste management facilities in the world and slash the proportion of rubbish going to landfill from 60 per cent to 23pc.
Approval
Waste chiefs do not expect any backlash from residents near the new sites since most of them are already used for waste disposal.
Friends of the Earth have also given their approval to the useof the biological technology which would be used to treat waste.
The deal - between the Greater Manchester Waste Disposal Authority, waste management specialists Viridor and construction giant John Laing - will be signed off within weeks, the M.E.N. understands.
The consortium won the contract to deal with Greater Manchester's waste in 2007 and is in the final stages of raising the cash.
The biological treatment plants would be based at existing plants at Cobden Street, Salford; Arkwright Street, Oldham; Reliance Street, Manchester; Longley Lane, Sharston and at Bredbury in Stockport.
Neil Swannick, chairman of GMWDA, said: "We believe that it will be the best waste management contract in Europe. It will be the best solution for reducing greenhouse gases and create a large number of jobs in the construction and supply chains. In view of the economic downturn, these jobs will be coming when we need them most."
GMWDA chief executive Paul Dunn added: "This deal represents one of the most significant investments in this type of waste infrastructure and will create some of the best facilities in the world."
Mr Dunn anticipates that the number of staff - including bin dustmen and support personnel - employed by GMWDA will increase from 650 to 750.
from MEN