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The Burning Issue
ENDS Waste & Bioenergy
30 episodes
8 months ago

Every fortnight the Burning Issue looks at different elements of the energy recovery sector.

Presented by Luke Walsh, the editor of endswasteandbioenergy.com, the show interviews leading figures in the energy recovery sector and aims to investigate where the sector is now and where does it go from here. 

Luke became interested in waste management while working on a bin lorry one summer in Essex. The team he was with collected commercial waste and dumped it in a huge landfill in Pitsea, with no attempt to sort or recycle it.  

Looking out over the landfill Luke thought this was the wrong approach and started writing about environmental issues and reporting on the energy-from-waste sector, which he believes is the best solution for waste that can’t be recycled. But is this still the case?


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Investing
Business,
Government
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All content for The Burning Issue is the property of ENDS Waste & Bioenergy and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.

Every fortnight the Burning Issue looks at different elements of the energy recovery sector.

Presented by Luke Walsh, the editor of endswasteandbioenergy.com, the show interviews leading figures in the energy recovery sector and aims to investigate where the sector is now and where does it go from here. 

Luke became interested in waste management while working on a bin lorry one summer in Essex. The team he was with collected commercial waste and dumped it in a huge landfill in Pitsea, with no attempt to sort or recycle it.  

Looking out over the landfill Luke thought this was the wrong approach and started writing about environmental issues and reporting on the energy-from-waste sector, which he believes is the best solution for waste that can’t be recycled. But is this still the case?


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Show more...
Investing
Business,
Government
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Local Partnership’s Hattie Parke on the looming end of PFI deals, what happens next, and a little bit about RDF
The Burning Issue
21 minutes 45 seconds
2 years ago
Local Partnership’s Hattie Parke on the looming end of PFI deals, what happens next, and a little bit about RDF

Every fortnight the Burning Issue looks at different elements of the energy recovery sector, taking the starting point that while energy recovery has moved some waste out of landfill, where does the sector go from here?


In this eighth episode of series two, the Burning Issue speaks to Hattie Parke as she takes on a new role as director of climate at the government-owned public-private partnership unit known as Local Partnerships. Parke has experienced the EfW sector before at consultancy Eunomia, which is the secretariat of the RDF Industry Group and is still active in it now. 


The episode focuses on:


  • Opportunities and problems for the EfW sector as long term PFI deals end
  • Why 25 year contracts are “probably” a thing of the past
  • What local authorities need to do now to get the best value for taxpayers
  • Staying on top of a changing policy environment 





Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Burning Issue

Every fortnight the Burning Issue looks at different elements of the energy recovery sector.

Presented by Luke Walsh, the editor of endswasteandbioenergy.com, the show interviews leading figures in the energy recovery sector and aims to investigate where the sector is now and where does it go from here. 

Luke became interested in waste management while working on a bin lorry one summer in Essex. The team he was with collected commercial waste and dumped it in a huge landfill in Pitsea, with no attempt to sort or recycle it.  

Looking out over the landfill Luke thought this was the wrong approach and started writing about environmental issues and reporting on the energy-from-waste sector, which he believes is the best solution for waste that can’t be recycled. But is this still the case?


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.