Thursday, 21 December 2023

Merry Christmas


It's nearly Christmas and the Straitgate saga continues to blight the lives of local people – as it has done since 1965.

We have often used the word saga to describe the attempts by Aggregate Industries to recover a relatively minor amount of sand and gravel from Straitgate Farm. From this dictionary entry, you can see why: 
A saga is the kind of long, drawn-out story that can cause the people who hear it to roll their eyes in boredom. 
To see the long, drawn-out story for Straitgate, click history, and indeed be prepared to roll your eyes. 

Now that Aggregate Industries has finally won permission to quarry Straitgate Farm – permission to quarry little more than 1 million tonnes of saleable sand and gravel from the 20 million tonnes originally hoped for – you might have expected a rush of activity by the company to get things going, given how much the company previously complained about how its other site 23 miles away at Houndaller could not produce enough of the right material, and given the company only has 3 years to fulfil a gamut of onerous pre-commencement conditions and obligations

But apparently not. Click update to see how much Aggregate Industries has achieved – or is prepared to say it has achieved – in the first of those 3 years. Suddenly, it would seem, Aggregate Industries is in no rush at all. 

No doubt there will be more fun and games next year, but for now we wish all readers a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.
 

Tuesday, 19 December 2023

Aggregate Industries’ Straitgate update for November and December


This week, with regards to the implementation of this permission, the company has said it has nothing to report for the last two months of the year, adding "the plan is to pick things up and get them moving in the New Year".

If such updates are to be believed, this means that Aggregate Industries has undertaken no activity in relation to the site for the last 6 months – with little activity of note before that.*

The company must satisfy a number of pre-commencement conditions and obligations before any mineral extraction can start.

EDIT 20.12.23 

* We asked Aggregate Industries: 
According to your updates, Aggregate Industries has done nothing with regard to Straitgate for the last six months or so, apart from sending a letter to the PWS owners - can you confirm this is correct? 
Tellingly, the company was unwilling to issue any such confirmation, other than to say: 
I can confirm that we have complied with the undertakings contained within our planning permission and that the permission gives us 3 years within which to implement the permission.

Friday, 1 December 2023

‘Exceptionally high’ rainfall – and still no water monitoring at Straitgate

Mineral extraction at Straitgate Farm is permitted to a level down to a guesstimate of the maximum water table – the MWWT

In their appeal decision, the Planning Inspectors said: 
the MWWT grid would be updated as necessary to reflect any higher groundwater readings.
Updated as necessary. Planning condition 28 for the Straitgate permission states: 
Prior to the commencement of any soil stripping on any phase of the development, a review of the Maximum Winter Water Table (MWWT) grid (being the hydrogeologically modelled surface of the maximum winter water table based on the highest recorded winter groundwater levels) shall be submitted to the Mineral Planning Authority for its approval in writing. 

Last month, the Environment Agency – in its Monthly water situation report: England October 2023 – reported that rainfall in the South West over the period November 2022 to October 2023 has been "Exceptionally high". 
What impact has all this rainfall had on the water table at Straitgate? Has the MWWT been exceeded again – as it has been in the past

No one knows. Aggregate Industries has not monitored groundwater levels at Straitgate since March 2022, the best part of 2 years. 

The company has confirmed: 
...we are not currently undertaking water monitoring at Straitgate. This is because there is no requirement to monitor at present as we have not yet started to implement our planning permission and therefore, the monitoring requirements within that permission have not yet started... 

However, it will be our intention during the course of 2024 and 2025 to undertake the 12 months of baseline monitoring that is required, and to seek approval of the required schemes so that the permission can be implemented prior to the January 2026 deadline. 
The MWWT is meant to reflect the maximum water table. Clearly – absent almost 2 years of groundwater monitoring during exceptionally wet periods – there is a high chance it doesn't.

Monday, 27 November 2023

Aggregate Industries delays PWS monitoring scheme visits

In June, Aggregate Industries wrote to Private Water Supply owners surrounding Straitgate Farm, advising that the company would visit them in the Autumn "to agree how, and where, we would monitor your private water supply". 

Aggregate Industries has now written to PWS owners, advising that the company is "not currently in a position to undertake the proposed visits to agree monitoring locations this Autumn. Instead we are hoping to undertake these visits during January 2024...".

Aggregate Industries was granted permission to quarry Straitgate Farm on appeal on 5 January 2023.

Sunday, 19 November 2023

Secondary aggregates continue to outsell sand & gravel in Devon

This month, Devon County Council published its 12th Local Aggregate Assessment. The LAA is:
… published annually to inform development and monitoring of Minerals/Local Plans, including recent sales and revisions to levels of reserves and the length of landbanks. 
According to the LAA, sales of land-won sand and gravel in the county have continued to flatline, with 0.521 million tonnes sold in 2022, down 4% from 0.541 the previous year. As the chart below shows, sales have not recovered since the financial crisis of 2008.


Sales of secondary and recycled aggregates across the county, however, tell another story. 

In 2022, secondary aggregates continued to outsell sand and gravel. The LAA explains:
3.3.1 The major source of secondary aggregates in Devon is the by-products derived from the extraction and processing of china clay in the Lee Moor area of Devon, which in 2022 accounted for 85% of the county’s production of secondary aggregates (an increase of approximately 6% from 2021). For each tonne of saleable china clay, up to nine tonnes of other materials are produced, with two main elements capable of use as secondary aggregate:  stent (rock), which can be used as general fill or, after crushing and screening, for other aggregate purposes; and  tip sand (washed material comprising quartz, unaltered feldspar and mica) which, with grading and washing, can be used for a variety of aggregate purposes including concrete and building sand. 
And sales of recycled aggregates grew in 2022, approaching sales of sand and gravel. 
Despite the current economic uncertainty, sales of recycled aggregates increased by approximately 12% in 2022 from the previous year.
The LAA describes recycled aggregates as: 
the waste arising from construction, demolition and excavation activity comprises a range of materials, of which the ‘hard inert’ elements (e.g. concrete, bricks, stone) can be recycled for use as aggregates.


With regard to future availability, there are hundreds of millions of tonnes of china clay mining waste piled all over Devon and Cornwall. A planning application by Aggregate Industries to continue to work secondary aggregates at Lee Moor was approved in 2019. In relation to recycled aggregates, according to the LAA: 
4.2.9 ... the annual processing capacity of Devon’s fixed CDEW recycling facilities (estimated as 1.28 million tonnes in the 2020/21 Devon Waste Plan AMR) is more than adequate for current and potentially greater levels of recycled aggregates production.
The hope must be that sales of the more sustainable secondary and recycled aggregate alternatives will displace the need for digging up primary virgin sand and gravel, including material from the Budleigh Salterton Pebble Beds. 

Hanson’s Town Farm Quarry, near Burlescombe, is one source of material from the Pebble Beds. The LAA reports that the site was mothballed this year: 
2.5.7 Town Farm forms part of Hanson’s Whiteball operation, for which the processing plant lies in Somerset adjacent to its border with Devon. An application for the continuation of extraction of existing sand and gravel reserves for a further 10 years was received in November 2022 and permission was granted in March 2023. The site was still operational in 2022, however, it was temporarily mothballed on 1st February 2023. 
So, clearly, material from the Budleigh Salterton Pebble Beds – the same material that underlies Straitgate Farm –  is not in such high demand, nor so profitable, for Hanson to be persuaded to keep the gates at Town Farm open. 

Tuesday, 7 November 2023

Aggregate Industries postpones Straitgate public meeting

In February of this year, Aggregate Industries informed us that: 
... we agree with your suggestion of a public meeting but would propose that this may be best held in the Autumn when there will be more information to report on. 
Last week, the company advised that this meeting has been postponed: 
You may recall previously we indicated the possibility of holding some sort of public event in the Autumn to update people on Straitgate.  However matters have not moved as quickly as we had hoped and therefore we are not in that position but I would like to reassure you that this remains part of our plans and when we are ready I will be in touch.
This follows a number of months of apparent inactivity, as we posted here.

Friday, 3 November 2023

We all know Aggregate Industries will have difficulty complying with Straitgate’s ‘no water body’ condition – Google Earth images confirm why

One of the first posts on this blog, back in 2012, asked: Could Straitgate be quarried without water? 

We noted that Exeter Airport's request that "no ponds or body of water be allowed as part of this development" to ensure aircraft safety from bird strikes, would surely be an impediment to any scheme. 

And indeed this impediment has now been formalised.

Earlier this year, the Planning Inspectors, in granting permission to quarry Straitgate Farm, conditioned: 
As we posted in January, this makes Aggregate Industries' plans for Straitgate incompatible with the Inspectors’ planning conditions, given that the company's approved plans rely on the formation of water bodies – both for flood mitigation and for restoration. As we wrote, the Inspectors' condition: 
...is clear and unambiguous. It is not limited by the size or duration of any water body – large or small, permanent or temporary.  
What exactly is a water body? As we previously posted: 
Wikipedia says "The term most often refers to oceans, seas, and lakes, but it includes smaller pools of water such as ponds, wetlands, or more rarely, puddles." LawInsider goes further. This helpful graphic also explains.  
In that 2012 post, we wrote about Aggregate Industries' nearby sand and gravel quarries at Blackhill and Hillhead, quarries that extracted the same type of material from the Budleigh Salterton Pebble Beds that would be extracted at Straitgate Farm. We wrote that Google Earth images: 
...reveal several bodies of water in each and it is inconceivable that Straitgate, particularly with all its water related issues, could ever be quarried without the formation of ponds or lagoons of some kind.
In fact, Hillhead suffered ponding problems only this year. 

Further back, we posted how the water body at Aggregate Industries' quarry at Thorn Tree Plantation at Blackhill was meant to be ephemeral but is instead present all year round

The company's quarry at Venn Ottery also suffered ponding issues

Hanson’s Town Farm Quarry works the same type of material and also has bodies of water

But let's build on that 2012 post, and, using Google Earth’s historical imaging, look at all five BSPB quarries in Devon that have been worked in recent times. The images below show the quarries at Venn Ottery, Marshbroadmoor at Rockbeare, Thorn Tree Plantation at Blackhill, Houndaller at Hillhead and Town Farm, at a time when extraction was actually underway. 

Venn Ottery
Marshbroadmoor
Thorn Tree Plantation
Houndaller
Town Farm



Clearly, sizeable new bodies of water were introduced at all of them.

So, even if we were to overlook Aggregate Industries' flood mitigation and restoration plans for Straitgate – that actually encourage water bodies – the above images underline, if any more underlining were needed, just how unworkable the whole scheme really is. 

‘Tyre wear particles now the leading cause of traffic pollution’

Aggregate Industries claims to be:
... a progressive, future-facing business. A company that is intrinsically sustainable - trusted and respected by stakeholders and the communities in which we operate.
Fine words, but in the real world the company's scheme at Straitgate Farm will see as-dug aggregate hauled 23 miles between quarry face and processing plant, more than any other UK quarry operation, some 2.5 million HGV miles in all

So, unless Aggregate Industries' HGVs magically run without tyres, Devon communities will pay the price.

The warning follows UK government data that shows significantly more tiny pollution particles now come from tyre erosion than are emitted from vehicle exhausts. The report estimates 52% of all the small particle pollution from road transport came from tyre and brake wear in 2021, plus a further 24% from abrasion of roads and their paint markings. Just 15% of the emissions came from the exhausts of cars and a further 10% from the exhausts of vans and HGVs.
As we drive, our tyres wear down and release invisible particles that we inhale and ultimately ingest. Strikingly, the rate of release of these particles is almost 2,000 times greater than the mass of particles from a modern exhaust pipe. It looks likely, then, that these apparently mundane yet economically vital and technically sophisticated products are a source of pollution that will make Dieselgate — the exhaust emissions cheating scandal of 2015 — look minor. The difference? No rules are being broken, yet current US and EU polices promoting battery electric vehicles through subsidies are set to make the problem worse.

Sand & gravel sales slump

The third quarter saw notable declines in the sales of ready-mixed concrete and sand & gravel, with drops of 15.0% and 12.2%, respectively. For ready-mixed concrete, the magnitude of the decline is comparable to 2009Q1, when macroeconomic and construction conditions were severely impacted by the global financial crisis.

Friday, 13 October 2023

Aggregate Industries’ Straitgate update for September

Aggregate Industries has provided the following update this week in relation to implementing its permission to quarry Straitgate Farm: 
... there are no updates for September but I am hoping we will be in a position to commence submitting schemes to discharge conditions before the end of the year.
Again, another month has gone by with apparently nothing to report. 

Mineral extraction scheme causes birdstrike concerns at RAF Fairford

We have previously posted about RAF Fairford and the threat of birdstrikes from nearby mineral works.


No wonder the MOD expressed concern over a nearby quarry proposal 21/0032/CWMAJM at the former RAF airfield at Down Ampney in the Cotswolds, 3 miles south west of RAF Fairford. 


The development proposed entails the stripping of topsoil, the extraction, working and storage of minerals, and the phased restoration of the site. 
Each of these activities have the potential to create an environment that would be attractive to those large and/or flocking bird species hazardous to aviation safety. 

The applicant has acknowledged that aircraft passing close to the application site, approaching or departing RAF Fairford, are likely to be at altitudes of less than 1,000ft above ground level and would be within the range of altitudes where 90% of birdstrike events take place. 

The applicant and the MOD have conducted pre-application discussions. Through these discussions the MOD has made clear that restoration of the site which results in the creation of open water would be unacceptable as those waterbodies would likely provide an environment attractive to those large and/or flocking bird species hazardous to aviation.
Despite the MOD's concerns, officers recommended approving the scheme, to extract 6.5 million tonnes of sand and gravel over 13 years with a phased restoration scheme using imported infill, and, last month, the proposal was given the green light by Gloucestershire County Council, 9 votes for, 2 against – subject to the prior completion of a S106 planning obligation to secure the implementation of a Wildlife Hazard Management Plan. 

Here in East Devon, aircraft also fly less than 1000 ft above Straitgate Farm on their landing descent to Exeter Airport.


For Aggregate Industries' scheme at Straitgate, a Wildlife Hazard Management Plan was also stipulated, with planning inspectors conditioning that: 
Of course, where Straitgate differs to the Cotswolds scheme is that restoration will not involve imported infill; Aggregate Industries will just dig a hole, and leave it. 

We have previously posted – given that water bodies are intended at Straitgate – that Aggregate Industries’ plans for the site are incompatible with the Inspectors’ planning conditions

This is even more concerning given the scale of Aggregate Industries’ (unintended) ponding problem at the company's nearby quarry at Hillhead.

So, the EA isn’t always right

Silverdale is a village in the Borough of Newcastle-under-Lyme in Staffordshire. For years the nearby landfill at Walleys Quarry has been the subject of thousands of complaints about the stench emanating from the site, possibly caused by the unpermitted dumping of plasterboard waste.

In 2021, a mother won a High Court battle against the Environment Agency for failing to properly regulate the site, which was accused of emitting hydrogen sulphide that risked shortening her son's life. However, the EA successfully appealed. Legal action is ongoing

Walley’s Quarry Ltd bought the site from Lafarge in 2016. 

Last year, Walleys Quarry Ltd won a High Court injunction against protestors, but also withdrew an appeal against a nuisance abatement notice issued by Newcastle-under-Lyme borough council
As part of the settlement, Walleys Quarry will pay Newcastle-under-Lyme £400,000 towards the cost of responding to the appeal and £60,000 to enable the council to continue monitoring levels of hydrogen sulphide in the community. 

Cllr Martin Hamilton, Newcastle-under-Lyme’s chief executive, said the agreement was “hugely significant”, while Nigel Bowen, Walleys Quarry’s CEO, said his company was pleased to reach “a level of mutual understanding and agreement” with the council. 

Lord Carnwath of Notting Hill, a former Supreme Court Justice, led the mediation process. In a statement, he said: “Walleys Quarry Limited acknowledge that the site has been the source of community complaint and the council acknowledge that Walleys Quarry Limited have improved their operational practices such that odour emissions have recently reduced significantly and best practicable means are currently in place.” 

The Environment Agency reports weekly on odour emissions from the site, measuring against WHO annoyance guidelines. In the last six months, the Agency produced 25 reports, each time including measurements from four locations. During this period, “just eight” of the 100 reporting figures exceeded the WHO’s guidance levels by 10%, Walleys Quarry says, and none exceeded 20%. 
However, it now turns out that that the EA has been under reporting emissions:
Local MP, Aaron Bell, who has previously raised concerns about the site, said the community had been "badly let down". 

Results from a previous monitoring exercise between 2017 and 2019 were "also clearly now incorrect", the Conservative MP for Newcastle-under-Lyme claimed. 

"Given that the EA relied on these results to justify to me why they would not install more monitoring - before eventually realising the stink was so bad they would have to - the community was particularly badly let down in this regard." 

He said the error had "dented public confidence" in the agency and he would be raising the issue in the House of Commons. 
We absolutely recognise the distress, the concerns and for many of you the anger that you feel at this situation and we are sorry that this has happened. What we have been doing as soon as we confirmed there was an issue, the EA spoke to the UKHSA so they could understand the implications of this and make sure between us we were given the best possible information to health partners so they were able to give the best possible advice to you. 

I also want to acknowledge that for many of you in the community trust in the EA was already low and this will have absolutely dented confidence further. What we wanted to do and what we are endeavouring to do and will continue to do is to be as open with you as we possibly can about what we know and about what we are doing.

Tungsten West ‘faces fight over ending cap on lorries’

Plans submitted to quarry land at Hatfield Aerodrome near St Albans in Hertfordshire

Brett Aggregates Ltd have submitted plans to establish a new quarry on land at the former Hatfield Aerodrome, including new access onto the A1057, aggregate processing plant and other ancillary facilities, together with the importation of inert fill material to restore the mineral workings, SADC Ref: 5/2023/1745; HCC Ref: PL/0232/21

The proposals would involve the winning and working, together with processing for sale, of some 8 million tonnes of sand and gravel over a period of around 32 years. 

This week, St Albans City & District Council lodged their objection to the plans to Herts County Council. 

Why is this interesting? 

It was only last year – following a nine-day public inquiry – that the Planning Inspectorate refused the company’s previous application to quarry the site, citing harm to the Green Belt, character, appearance and amenity of the area. Naturally, campaigners welcomed the decision. 

In their objection, SADC wrote: 
St Albans City and District Council previously expressed concerns over the proposal for a quarry at this site and the further information provided is not considered to have addressed these concerns. Having noted the changes within the current proposals, it is not considered that the concerns of the Council have been overcome, and as such the Council raises formal objections in respect of this application. 
One of these objections related to non-compliance of a S106 agreement: 
1. Section 106: The need for the original Section 106 to be complied with and for the Ellenbrook Country Park – outstanding for more than a decade – to be established. 

EDIT 1.11.23 Hertfordshire County Council refuse Ellenbrook Quarry plans

Wednesday, 27 September 2023

TPO on Straitgate trees confirmed

Aggregate Industries’ consultants had previously recognised that site entrance works and deep-dig road construction at Straitgate Farm could cause the loss of two majestic 200 year-old oak trees, writing
the works will potentially interfere with the root protection areas of Trees F, G... and it is likely they will be damaged by the development and need to be felled. 4.1  
They produced a photomontage to show the result:
 
The Planning Inspectors, in their report permitting mineral development at Straitgate Farm, conditioned that all trees outside the mineral working area "shall not be felled, lopped or topped or have their roots damaged", and that specifically trees F and G, either side of the permitted site entrance, "are worthy of protection and should be retained". 

East Devon District Council agreed with Aggregate Industries’ consultants that the proposed works could damage trees F and G, and in March of this year issued a provisional Tree Protection Order 23/0014/TPO, as we posted at the time

Today, EDDC has confirmed the TPO, providing these trees with permanent protection, because
The trees contribute to the amenity and character of the area and they are considered under threat from development and the impact of heavy machinery and vehicles.
Aggregate Industries – seeming to confirm the trees were indeed at risk – objected to the TPO:
... on the grounds that it is not necessary and that the mechanism for protecting these trees is already secured by condition 6 of the Appeal Decision for sand and gravel extraction at Straitgate Farm and that the only works that may impact on these trees are those that are necessary to implement a planning permission.
However, EDDC were of the view that: 
The detailed plans submitted by Aggregate Industries show both trees being retained but then states that tree F (named as T3 in TPO) and tree G (named as T2 in TPO) ‘will be monitored and only removed if necessary’. This is somewhat ambiguous and raises concern that the trees may not be given the full protection during construction if it’s considered that the trees can be removed ‘if considered necessary’. 

It is noted as stated by the Objection, that the trees are protected by Condition 6 of The Appeal as they are shown as being retained on the plans (albeit with the caveat of ‘will be monitored and only removed if necessary’). However, with the conditions being only short-term and the rather ambiguous wording, it is considered that TPO will therefore help ensure long-term protection and that they are appropriately managed by current and future owners. 
Given that even Aggregate Industries’ own consultants recognised the risk of harm to these trees, there must now be a big question mark over the deliverability of the site access plans

TPOs allow the potential for "unlimited fines" in the case of damage: 
Section 210(2) of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 provides that anyone found guilty of these offences is liable, if convicted in the magistrates’ court, to a fine of up to £20,000. In serious cases a person may be committed for trial in the Crown Court and, if convicted, is liable to an unlimited fine. Section 210(3) provides that, in determining the amount of fine, the court shall take into account any financial benefit which has resulted, or is likely to result, from the offence.

Thursday, 21 September 2023

Could Holcim ever be a ‘CO2 hero’?

Holcim – cement conglomerate and parent company of Aggregate Industries – has been entertaining members of the press at its new Innovation Hub in Lyon, which the company has apparently set up to "showcase its sustainable building solutions and serve as a co-creation lab to accelerate low-carbon, circular and energy-efficient building worldwide."

Remarkably, somebody has come away thinking Holcim is a CO2 hero. How – given that the company has annual CO2 emissions more than many countries – could that possibly be?

Has Holcim dramatically cut its CO2 emissions to net zero – rather than just talk about it? Not according to its 2022 Sustainability Report, where we find Holcim pumped some 78 million tons of CO2 (scope 1 emissions) into the atmosphere in 2022 alone. Holcim claims: 
We reduced Scope 1 emissions to 562 kg CO2 net per ton of cementitious materials, which represented a decrease of 2% on a like-for-like basis versus the prior year. 
Of course, continued progress at that rate and the game’s over. 

Dig a little deeper though and we find that the press at Lyon were briefed by Nollaig Forrest, Holcim’s new chief sustainability officer. Her background is not in science, climate or sustainability, but – according to this article – in "communications and corporate affairs at multiple industrial companies". It’s clearly important to Holcim, with such glacial progress in emission cuts, to at least tell a good story. 

So how did Holcim persuade this journalist of its hero status?


Towards the end of his article, the author in question writes this paragraph: 
What strikes me most about Holcim is how a company can go from villain to hero by embracing the future. When I spoke to Jenisch, [Holcim CEO] he was adamant that the concrete industry wasn’t anything like the tobacco or car industry, fleeing from its responsibilities. And Holcim itself is a future-oriented company, he said, that wants to do its part. "Now that we know the harmful effect [of CO2], we are fully on it," he said. "We are part of the solution." Though the past is "interesting," he said, "it’s more important what action we take now. This is where we want to be part of. It’s more important that we accelerate climate action, with speed and transparency. We don’t want to be greenwashing." 
So, embrace the future, forget about all the damage caused by your past emissions and providing climate reparations for affected communities, keep selling cement at more than 0.5 tons net of CO2 for every ton produced, and become a CO2 hero. Easy. 

But let’s unpack that paragraph above.  

Holcim's CEO claims the concrete industry isn’t fleeing from its responsibilities, however that is exactly what Holcim is doing in the case of Indonesian islanders seeking proportionate compensation from the company for damage to their livelihoods due to repeated flooding as global warming has driven up sea levels, arguing that the company is responsible for 0.477% of global industrial emissions from 1950 to 2021. A spokesman for Holcim said: 
We do not believe that court cases focused on single companies are an effective mechanism to tackle the global complexity of climate action. 

And as far as accelerating climate action, we only have to look at this tiny corner of East Devon, and subsidiary Aggregate Industries' plans for an unsustainable multi-million mile haulage scheme for Straitgate Farm, to tell us all we need to know. But NGOs backing the islanders’ action also claim the company is not doing enough to cut its emissions
There is some support for this position from a new report by Corporate Climate Responsibility Monitor, which ranked Holcim high relative to most of the other 23 companies studied for its net-zero ambition and transparency, but said its strategy only had moderate integrity because it hinges on energy intensity targets, low-quality renewable energy certificates and extensive use of carbon capture storage and usage. 
Finally, when it comes to "we don’t want to be greenwashing", Holcim appears to have put a brake on its Twitter account, but this was one of its last tweets. Greenwashing? You decide.

Holcim ‘received EU emission allowances for idle cement plant’

Holcim, the parent company of Aggregate Industries, is one of five cement companies to have received €88 million in free EU emission allowances – according to research by the Oil Price Information Service – despite plants sitting idle or only emitting relatively small amounts of CO2.

As Global Cement reports, the companies would have been able to sell the permits or use them to subsidise emissions costs at other plants. 

Nice work if you can get it.

Tungsten West warns of insolvency risk

Tungsten West’s market capitalisation has fallen from more than £120mn in April last year to less than £5mn. The shares were down 35 per cent following Thursday’s announcement to 2.44p. 
Tungsten West last month applied to the Environment Agency, England’s environment watchdog, for the final permits that it needs for the processing plant. There had been concerns from local residents that the plant would generate nuisance, low-frequency noise. [Neil Gawthorpe, chief executive] said he was “confident” of securing the permits. 
Provided the permits are secured, Tungsten West would need to raise £25mn of debt and £35mn to £40mn of equity to bring the mine back into production by 2025, according to Gawthorpe.

UK construction orders slump

Sunday, 3 September 2023

Aggregate Industries’ Straitgate update for July & August

Aggregate Industries has provided the following updates of what the company has apparently achieved over the last two months in relation to implementing its permission to quarry Straitgate Farm. 

In July: 
Nothing to update this month other than to report that following the third letter to owners of the PWSs in June we now have 26 of the 39 properties identified wanting to be part of the monitoring scheme.
In August: 
Just to confirm there are no updates for August.

Thursday, 17 August 2023

Tungsten West resurrects secondary aggregates plans for Hemerdon Mine

Having been dropped last November, Tungsten West has resurrected its plans to increase sales and HGV movements of secondary aggregates from its tungsten and tin mine at Hemerdon near Plymouth: 
To deliver the Project economically and sustainably, the Company will produce secondary aggregates, a by-product from mining which, once sold, will provide an early revenue stream and reduce the storage of barren rock and associated opex at site.  

To enable the delivery of the aggregates business, and to optimise the core tungsten and tin business, the Company has submitted a section 73 application to vary the tonnage cap associated with the existing permission for 50 truck movements per day from the site. Traffic and market studies carried out in conjunction with the application highlight that the Company can plug a gap in the market for high-quality, secondary aggregates in Devon with a minimal increase in overall heavy vehicle traffic. Tungsten West has actively involved the local community, local councils and regulatory bodies in the process, participating in regular discussions and offering a direct line to the Company for all stakeholders. 
In addition, after the previous operator caused low frequency noise disturbance and sleep deprivation to the local community, Tungsten West has submitted a new permit application to the Environment Agency following plant modifications and noise trials: 
The Company has worked closely with the Environment Agency and Devon County Council throughout the entire permitting and noise trial process and anticipates the decision regarding the permit approval to be forthcoming within the coming months.
...Tungsten West has initiated a further evaluation of the financing structure of the Company, whereby spending priority has been given to activities relating to planning and permitting, environmental compliance and funding, as these are essential to the continued progress of the Project.   

Therefore, in order to prioritise these activities, a proposed cost reduction programme will need to be implemented, including a further approximate 25% reduction in staff costs via redundancies, reduced hours and resignations. In line with this, the Company has initiated a collective consultation process with staff and expects to announce the results of this exercise in September 2023. In another move to manage liquidity, the Company is in the process of agreeing deferred payment plans and restructuring supply agreements with a number of creditors.

Sunday, 13 August 2023

Holcim accused of human rights violations and environmental damages in Uganda


Holcim’s subsidiary in Uganda is accused of inaction in the face of complaints spanning a seven-year period and retaliatory measures against community members who raised due diligence issues.
The parent company of Aggregate Industries claims: 
Holcim operates according to the highest standards of governance, ethics and integrity with zero tolerance for any breaches across its business worldwide.

It's not only the community that has issues with Holcim's work practices in Uganda:
 

According to BWI General Secretary Ambet Yuson: 
A worldwide and deadly pattern of work-related accidents has harmed and killed many Holcim workers. Apologising for this latest disaster in Uganda, on top of the others, is no longer sufficient. Instead of lavish dividends and compensation to its management at the expense of decent jobs for workers and compensation to the families of those who died on the job, Holcim should justly compensate all of its workers who have been injured or killed on the job, eliminate any kind of abuse of subcontracted and third-party workers, and exercise due diligence in the selection, management, and compliance of contractors.

Sand & gravel sales in decline again

Sales of sand and gravel in Britain have fallen 7.3% over the last 12 months, according to the MPA

The trade body representing Aggregate Industries et al. report that various factors have contributed to the decline in demand:
Construction materials cost inflation may have slowed from a peak in mid-2022, but the cumulative effect of high costs and higher interest rates over the past 18 months continues to weigh heavily on the financial viability of projects and on housing affordability. Additionally, labour constraints throughout the construction supply chain have contributed to the overall challenges faced by the sector.

Meanwhile, the CPA reports that the construction sector is entering an "acute" recession: 
The construction industry is expected to experience an acute recession this year driven by double-digit falls in the two largest construction sectors: private housing new build and private housing repair, maintenance, and improvement. The CPA forecasts construction output to fall by 7.0% in 2023...

Ready-mix concrete batching plant at Hillhead approved

Material won from Straitgate Farm is to be processed at Hillhead Quarry near Uffculme. Earlier this month, an application by Aggregate Industries seeking prior approval of a ready-mix concrete batching plant at Hillhead was approved by Devon County Council.  
It is proposed that the ready-mix concrete batching plant is located within the current processing/stockpile area of Hillhead Quarry. It is understood to be 16m in height. It would be used for the treatment and utilisation for sale of minerals, the majority of which, at least 75%, would be extracted from Hillhead Quarry.

Straitgate concerns raised in Feedback Report for Draft East Devon Local Plan

Last month, East Devon District Council issued a Feedback Report which summarised key matters raised by organisations and the public in response to the Draft East Devon Local Plan.

The report was considered at the Strategic Planning Committee meeting on 21 July. EDDC said: 
Over the coming months the feedback received will be assessed and plan refinement and redrafting will need to take place before moving onto subsequent stages of plan making.
Unsurprisingly, the recently permitted quarry at Straitgate Farm featured in the report, including: 
Policy 22 - Ottery St Mary and its future development - General issues 

Recently approved new quarry off Exeter Road will generate heavy industrial traffic that will impact on road capacity/speed/safety as will the associated new animal crossing. This should be taken into account before increasing road usage from new residents

LP_Otry_09 - Land at Thorne Farm - Preferred Allocation 

Safety concerns around potential conflict between quarry and housing traffic 

Quarry – with the quarry now agreed, there are severe concerns about how the quarry operations will cause water pollution. This proposed site is directly below the quarry site, so there could be a major safety concern. 

Nearby quarry will be detrimental to new residents/pupils health

Saturday, 29 July 2023

US families sue Aggregate Industries’ parent company over payments to IS

Last year, Aggregate Industries’ parent company, Holcim, agreed to pay $778 million after its Lafarge subsidiary pleaded guilty to US charges of supporting Islamic State, becoming the first company in American history to be convicted of bribing a foreign terrorist organisation. 

Previous posts covering the company’s involvement in Syria can be found here.  

As we posted earlier this year: 
Holcim – previously LafargeHolcim, the parent company of Aggregate Industries, which was formed after a "merger of equals" in 2015 between Swiss-based Holcim and French-based Lafarge – will be the ultimate beneficiary of the quarry at Straitgate Farm.   

The company changed its name in 2021, no doubt because of a number of controversies. One controversy – Lafarge’s previous support for terrorists in Syria – refuses to go away. 
This week, Reuters announced
Relations of a U.S. aid worker and American soldiers - all killed or injured by Islamic State and Al-Nusra Front - have lodged a legal claim against cement maker Lafarge over payments the French company made to extremist groups.
Court documents state: 
Defendants' payments aided the terrorist attacks that targeted plaintiffs and their family members...

Lafarge's support for ISIS and ANF ran deep. It operated a lucrative cement plant in northern Syria, and it decided that bribing Syrian terrorists offered the best way to protect its profits from the plant.

Tuesday, 25 July 2023

Major incident closes B3174 Exeter Road

A major incident has occurred on the B3174 Exeter Road into Ottery St Mary. 

A Sainsbury’s lorry lies burning in the ditch near Straitgate Farm this morning, forced off the road after passing a builders merchant HGV travelling in the opposite direction. 

Clearly, as we have said countless times before, there is insufficient width on parts of this road – the main road into and out of Ottery St Mary – for HGVs to comfortably pass each other. 

It again shows why Aggregate Industries’ scheme to quarry Straitgate Farm and put another 200 HGV movements a day on this stretch of road is both nonsensical and dangerous. 

This incident occurred in the same location as the permitted cattle crossing, which is also required as part of the company's plans.





Sunday, 16 July 2023

Aggregate Industries’ Straitgate update for June

Aggregate Industries has provided the following update for the work the company carried out in June, in relation to its permission to quarry Straitgate Farm: 
In June the decision was taken to write a third time to owners of private water supplies who had not yet signed up to the monitoring scheme to give them a further chance to be part of the scheme. People who have already signed up were contacted to advise that visits to be undertaken as part of the preparation of the monitoring scheme would take place in the Autumn and that we would be in touch nearer the time. 

Other works related to the permission for the importation of material into Hillhead Quarry were that the widening of Clay Lane was completed and this is now open to two way traffic.

Monday, 26 June 2023

What’s the scale of Aggregate Industries’ ponding problem at Hillhead?

If Aggregate Industries is to quarry Straitgate Farm, it must do so without creating any water bodies – for aircraft safeguarding reasons – as we have previously posted

Is that possible? Of course not. 

How can we be so sure? You only have to look at Aggregate Industries’ Houndaller quarry at Hillhead, near Uffculme. It has the same type of sand and gravel that exists at Straitgate Farm. We recently posted that Aggregate Industries has ponding problems at Houndaller, and that the company has now been forced to apply for permission to change the surface water management plan for the site. 

Last December, Devon County Council’s Monitoring Report for the site reported: 
4.15 Since the previous monitoring visit, Phase 6 has now been worked out and is awaiting grading and topsoiling… It is understood water is ponding in this Phase and the operator would like to direct this water to Houndaller Pond, north of the farmhouse in order to complete restoration.
 And the scale of the problem? The Monitoring Report helpfully provides this photo:

AI’s archeological analysis & report for Hillhead more than THREE YEARS LATE

Aggregate Industries finds it difficult to stick to planning conditions – as we have previously posted here, here, here, here, here, here and here

Condition 12 for Aggregate Industries’ Houndaller quarry at Hillhead near Uffculme in Devon states: 
RECORDING OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORIC FEATURES 

No topsoil stripping shall be undertaken in Working Phases 6, 7 and 8, as shown on drawings nos. 2285/ROMP/3C and 2285/ROMP/73D, until the applicant has secured the implementation of a programme of archaeological work in accordance with a written scheme of investigation which has been submitted by the applicant and approved by the Mineral Planning Authority. The development shall be carried out at all times in strict accordance with the approved scheme, or such other details as may be subsequently agreed in writing by the Mineral Planning Authority. 

Reason: To ensure that an appropriate record is made of archaeological evidence that may be affected by the development in accordance with the Development Plan specifically Devon Minerals Plan Policy M19.
Why is this condition important? 

In 2016, Devon County Council’s Senior Historic Environment Officer wrote
…the [geophysical] survey did identify anomalies that have the appearance of land divisions and may be associated with former prehistoric or Romano-British field systems. The expansion of the quarry into these areas will destroy these heritage assets. … 

Based on the results of this initial stage of works the requirement and scope of any further archaeological mitigation can be determined and implemented either in advance of or during construction works. This archaeological mitigation work may take the form of full area excavation in advance of groundworks or the monitoring and recording of groundworks associated with the construction of the proposed development to allow for the identification, investigation and recording of any exposed archaeological or artefactual deposits. The results of the fieldwork and any postexcavation analysis undertaken would need to be presented in an appropriately detailed and illustrated report.
The initial archaeological fieldwork was completed in 2019, so where’s the analysis and report? How do we know what’s been destroyed? Devon County Council’s latest monitoring report for the site says the report should have been "completed within 3 months following the completion of fieldwork": 
Comments/ Course of Action: 
Written Scheme of Investigation entitled ‘Western Extension of Houndaller (Hillhead) Quarry, Phases 6, 7 and 8, Uffculme, Devon - Project specification for an archaeological excavation’ dated 18th April 2019 - approved on 14 May 2019. Soil stripping on Phase 6 commenced on 12 August 2019 and archaeological investigation was complete. The archaeological investigation for Phase 7 is complete, however, post-excavation analysis, reporting and archive is yet to be completed. The agreed Written Scheme of Investigation states that this will be completed within 3 months following the completion of fieldwork. The operator has confirmed that this is anticipated to be completed within 3-4 months. Therefore, this should be completed within 4 months, by 13 July 2023.
As of last week, MORE THAN THREE YEARS LATE, Aggregate Industries has still not done the work, with the Council’s Senior Historic Environment Officer, writing
the post-excavation assessment, analysis, reporting and archive creation and disposition has yet to be undertaken. 
What hope, therefore, for the plethora of conditions for Straitgate Farm?