Plans to provide a heat network to connect three sites in Penrith are set to be given the go-ahead – and is thought to be the first scheme of its kind in Cumbria.
Members of Eden local area planning committee are recommended to approve proposals from Omega Proteins to construct a heat network to connect the plant, Sewborwens Farm and the Newton Rigg estate.
According to a report prepared for the meeting the scheme seeks to make best use of latent heat produced by industrial processes at the Omega plant.
The report said: “At present, this surplus of heat is used to warm office and administrative buildings on the Omega site, but a significant amount is currently wasted.
“The proposed district heating system seeks to make best use of this surplus to form the basis of a wider district heating system.”
According to the planning statement submitted by the applicant, the scheme would decarbonise heating at Sewborwens Farm and Newton Rigg.
The statement added the heat network would demonstrate the ‘wider potential’ for a heat network to be established in the town to serve housing, employment and other users.
Planning documents added the heat network was a sealed loop system, with pipes carrying clean hot water around the network and returning it to the heat source where it is recharged and recirculated.
The proposed pipeline would be about 2,100 metres in length, and would run underground.
According to the report, the pipeline would cross Greystoke Road underground and travel north west through farmland at Sewborwens to reach the farmstead.
Then it will head north west along the Sewborwens access road before turning north westerly, heading towards Newton Road, passing under the road and into the Newton Rigg.
The planning statement submitted by the applicant said: “The construction of heat networks is recognised as a crucial part of how the UK will reach its net zero targets as one of the most cost-effective ways of decarbonising heating, uniquely able to tap into otherwise inaccessible large-scale renewable and recovered heat sources, including waste heat from industrial installations like Omega.”
Members of Eden local area planning committee are recommended to approve the proposal when they meet on June 12 at Penrith Town Hall.