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News - Latest Bracknell
information leaflet
Bracknell Forest Borough Council have issued a new leaflet designed to
address some of the questions.
Renewable Energy for
Bracknell - Information booklet
Bracknell Forest BC has produced
a new information booklet about the proposed renewable energy features
to make the redeveloped Bracknell town centre more eco-friendly and
sustainable. The booklet includes answers to a number of questions posed
by local residents setting out the context and the local benefits as
well as impacts.
Bracknell
Town Centre RENAISSANCE
Community
Energy Win for Bracknell Renaissance
Bracknell
Forest Borough Council has recently been awarded a £1.85m capital grant
from the Energy Saving Trust's Community Energy Programme in
connection with the
Bracknell
town centre regeneration project. This was as a result of an
application made to the programme by
Bracknell
Forest
BC
and TV Energy in July 2004. The funding will assist with
engineering and construction of a woodchip-fuelled CHP energy centre and
heat/cooling distribution networks to supply green energy services to
new and existing public buildings in the town.
Bracknell to
become a European Beacon for Green Energy
Bracknell
Forest Borough Council's bid for major European funding to support its
ambition for the regenerated Bracknell
town
centre to be powered by green energy has been accepted by the European
Commission.The project, christened Renaissance,
will enable high standards of energy efficiency and green (renewable)
energy technologies to be built into plans for the redevelopment of the
outdated new town.
The
total Renaissance project is worth £12.5M in total for Bracknell
and
funding from Europe
is
essential. The grant from the European Commission has been awarded under
CONCERTO, a major new European Union initiative to support
local communities in demonstrating the social, environmental and
economic benefits of integrating renewable energy, energy efficiency and
energy-management systems on a community scale. The Council, with partner
TV Energy, will start negotiations with the Commission later this month
to determine the final level of grant on offer.
The
Renaissance project involves a
consortium of three urban areas in Europe, each
taking similar actions to increase the take up of sustainable energy and
learning from one another in the process. Lyon
in
southern France
and Zaragoza
in
northern Spain
will
partner Bracknell, which
will co-ordinate the project.The project is scheduled to commence in
2005 and concludes in 2009.
The
Bracknell
Renaissance
team includes the Borough Council, the Bracknell Regeneration
Partnership, TV Energy, Waitrose, SEEDA, Slough Heat and Power and the University
of
Reading.
Many other organisations will also be involved from across the
South East region.
A
great deal of work has already been completed as a part of an Energy
Saving Trust funded feasibility study carried out by TV Energy to assess
the town centre's energy needs and to develop a solution to meet those
needs from clean, green energy sources. It is estimated that significant
carbon dioxide savings can be achieved by adopting renewable energy into
the town centre and that the new systems may be provided at no extra
cost to the Borough Council, developers or consumers.
The
European Commission funding will enable the Borough Council to work with
a range of partners to design and install a state-of-the-art district
heating, cooling and power system to serve the town centre which may run
on sustainably produced wood fuel. Waste wood thinnings from local
forests and woodland will help power the energy plant in the short term
with new short rotation coppice planted to provide fuel in the medium to
long term.
The
innovative plans could also include wind and solar energy installations.
The project will also involve a significant amount of research and
development to ensure that the highest possible standards of energy
efficiency are adopted into the design of the new buildings and for
those that will be refurbished.
The
project will act as a leading example of how to develop urban
sustainable energy schemes and the results will be shared with 13 other
associated communities committed to support the project. This network of communities which stretches from the South East
of England to the City of Venice, with
its well known problems related to climate change and rising sea levels,
to communities in Greece, Bulgaria, Spain, Croatia
and Poland.
The
Borough Council's Chief Executive, Timothy Wheadon, is excited by the
award: “The Renaissance project adds to the catalogue of innovations
that Bracknell Forest Borough Council champions. It will further add to Bracknell's
profile as a high performing local authority and will make us stand out
as a high quality town centre. In this age of uncertainty surrounding
security of energy supply and global climate change, the town will be
taking a positive step forward to solve these problems locally.”
Dr.
Keith Richards, the Project Manager for Renaissance and CEO of TV Energy,
believes the plans for Bracknell
will set the standard for other town centre redevelopments in the UK.
“This is a major project which will put Bracknell
on the map as a pan-European beacon for renewable energy. By 2009 a
majority of the town centre's energy needs could be met from locally
produced, non polluting green energy generation.”
BRACKNELL LATEST: Energy networks take shape
Phase 2 of the feasibility study will be complete by the end of May, and many of the more detailed aspects of the primary energy provision and infrastructure are being firmed up. From the first phase of the study, completed at the end of January, it was concluded that a mixture of renewable energy generation from woodchip CHP, wind, solar and anaerobic digestion of green waste streams combined with gas CHP would produce the best financial and environmental case for local residents and businesses in Bracknell.
The retained and new build portion of the town centre development comprising the public sector buildings will act as the anchor for the installation of the heating and cooling networks. New private sector retail, commercial, leisure and residential areas will progressively provide additional energy demand to present a technically and financially viable scheme. Current activities are focused around providing heat, cooling and power into the networks from two energy centres, at the northern and southern ends of the town, with capacity to provide for the anticipated take up of integrated energy supply from those public and private sector buildings. Central network capacity would be such as to allow expansion of the connected energy demand to other buildings in and around Bracknell. Further increases beyond that potential identified above would require additional generating capacity located outside of the current development boundary of Bracknell centre.
New phase of study
begins
TV
Energy, Bracknell Forest Borough Council, SEEDA and Waitrose and David
Wolfenden Company Ltd have recently completed the first phase of the
detailed project feasibility study of Bracknell town centre, and initial
conclusions have been drawn from the technical and financial analysis
undertaken thus far. The outcome of the study has shown that integrated
energy services incorporating a large proportion of renewable energy
supply demonstrates the best financial and environmental solution over
the long term for local residents, businesses and Bracknell Forest
Borough Council. Further activities in phase two will refine the
analysis carried out in phase one and work towards the establishment of
an Energy Services Company as a means to providing clean, low cost
heating, cooling and electricity for Bracknell town centre and
potentially Waitrose HQ.
Bracknell residents want renewables
The
feasibility study to determine how renewable energy can be incorporated
into Bracknell is involving considerable local community and stakeholder
consultation. Residents have championed the regeneration project as a
great opportunity for renewable energy to prove itself as the future
energy source for the UK. A report on the attitudes of local people to
renewable energy and the regeneration plan has been produced by TV
Energy's environmental sociology advisor.
Technical analysis progressing!
Part
of the feasibility study of energy provision initially involves
splitting Bracknell town centre into a number of 'energy islands',
including the Waitrose HQ site. These islands comprise individual
heating and cooling networks supplied from energy centres, and are
defined in terms of the phasing of the construction process. As
construction is completed, these networks will be connected together and
joined by other surrounding developments.
2-Ten
FM interview
In
September local radio station 2-Ten FM included in a local news bulletin
an interview with Michael Beech of TV Energy, discussing the Bracknell
RE-generation project and how renewable energy will provide Bracknell
with its primary energy needs. Our photo shows Michael in full flow at
the station's Calcot studio, but the accomplished way in which he
presented the Bracknell plan and background issues for the general
public proved that he isn't just a pretty face!
RENAISSANCE in Bracknell
TV Energy, Bracknell Forest Borough
Council, SEEDA and Waitrose and David Wolfenden Company Ltd have started
work on a detailed feasibility study of Bracknell town centre to
determine how renewable energy can be incorporated in the proposed town
centre redevelopment. The study is supported by grant from the Energy
Saving Trust's Community Energy programme.
The feasibility assessment will be
undertaken over the next nine months and will include a detailed
assessment of the technical options, financial implications and the
development of a new Energy Service Company which will be the future
delivery vehicle for the planned community energy supply. The study will
also involve considerable local community and stakeholder consultation
and involvement. The outcome of the study will be a business plan which
will set the framework for the later development stages.
Capital funding opportunities will emerge
as the outline of the project becomes clear, and it is expected that
applications will be made to the EST Community Energy Capital Grant
scheme as the next step on from feasibility funding, as well as to the
EC Concerto 'Integrated Energy Supply' under the current Sixth Framework
Programme.
The Concerto bid will be called
RENAISSANCE: Renewable ENergy Acting in SuStainable And Novel
Community Enterprises. Bracknell's bid partners will be Zaragoza
(Spain) and Lyons (France). More on this in next month's update.
See under projects
for background information about Bracknell.
The Bracknell town centre redevelopment
plan is currently listed in the website of the South East Regional
Assembly, under Urban Renaissance - Examples of Good Practice.
Click on the link: www.southeast-ra.gov.uk/regional_policies/urban_ren/index.html
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