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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Skrytek v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government & Ors [2013] EWCA Civ 1231 (15 October 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/1231.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 1231 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION, ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
HHJ Stephen Davies sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
VICE PRESIDENT OF THE COURT OF APPEAL CIVIL DIVISION
LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
and
LORD JUSTICE BRIGGS
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Dorothy Skrytek |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government (2) Derby City Council (3) Resource Recovery Solutions (Derbyshire) Ltd (Transcript of the Handed Down Judgment of WordWave International Limited A Merrill Communications Company 165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838 Official Shorthand Writers to the Court) |
Respondents |
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Jonathan Moffett (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the First Respondent
The Second Respondent did not appear and was not represented
Martin Kingston QC and Richard Kimblin (instructed by Addleshaw Goddard LLP) for the Third Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Beatson:
Introduction
Factual and regulatory background
"When applying the waste hierarchy…Member States shall take measures to encourage the options that deliver the best overall environmental outcome. This may require specific waste streams departing from the hierarchy where this is justified by life-cycle thinking on the overall impacts of the generation and management of such waste."
The Inspector's decision
"Main Issues
12. From the evidence put before me both orally and in writing, I consider that the main issues in this appeal are:
(i) The performance of the proposal against the development plan;
(ii) The relationship of the proposed development to the waste hierarchy and whether the development would hinder the achievement of higher recycling rates;
(iii) The effect of the proposal on the character and appearance of the area;
(iv) The effect of traffic generated by the proposed development on the safety and free flow of traffic on the road system in this part of Derby;
(v) The effect of the proposal on air quality in this part of Derby; and
(vi) The effect of the proposal on the health of those living in this part of Derby.
…
35. Other elements of RP Policy 38 require waste to be treated higher up the waste hierarchy and for minimum targets for recycling and composting of municipal solid waste to be raised to 30% by 2010 and 50% by 2015. It forms no part of [Derby] City Council's case as local planning authority that the proposal would fail to conform to the former or would prejudice recycling and composting targets to be met. However, others take a different view.
36. Dealing first of all with the waste hierarchy, one of the key objectives of national policy in both PPS10 and WS2007 is to drive the management of waste up the hierarchy. This is to take the management of waste away from the old and long established practice in this country of disposing of much of our municipal solid waste to landfill. Although one of the processes of the proposed waste treatment facility is to separate out glass and ferrous and non-ferrous metals from the municipal waste that is received and send these off for recycling, I recognise that most of the waste would be treated and used as a feedstock for the gasification process to generate energy. Much has been made of the permit's classification of the proposed facility as an incineration plant rather than as an energy recovery plant. The point was made by some at the inquiry that incineration can be regarded as disposal at the bottom of the waste hierarchy whilst energy recovery lies on the next step up in the hierarchy.
37. This seems to me to stem from a misunderstanding of how energy efficiency from the proposed plant is treated in the permit. Initially, the proposed plant will generate electricity which will be fed into the grid. Just generating electricity does not qualify a plant to be treated as a recovery process. To qualify, a plant has to raise its energy efficiency by also exporting heat. In my view, it would be unusual for the operator to sign up customers to take any heat produced by the plant at the outset. Potential customers are likely to wait to see whether the plant comes up to expectations in terms of the amount of heat that it produces and the reliability of supply of the heat. Once they are satisfied on these points, then contracts to take the heat may well be signed. It is in the financial interests of the operator of the plant to secure customers to take any heat generated. Once heat is being exported, the operator of the plant can return to the Environment Agency to have the plant reclassified as an energy recovery facility.
38. The important factor is that a plant is located so that potential customers for the heat are within easy reach. Long lengths of pipe work can be expensive to install and there is the challenge of ensuring that heat is not lost whilst being transported in long lengths of pipe. In this case, the appeal site lies cheek by jowl with a large area of manufacturing industry. Thus, there is considerable potential for heat produced by the proposed facility to be used by neighbouring industrial consumers.
39. In this regard, I note that the Environment Agency through the environmental permit requires steam/hot water pass-outs to be provided and maintained. This would enable the plant to provide heat to nearby consumers once the plant is up and running and customers have been signed up. Through the permit, the Agency also requires the operator of the plant to review options for recovering heat on an ongoing basis.
In recognition that there can be misunderstanding as to how to apply the waste hierarchy in such situations, DEFRA has produced guidance on the interpretation of the hierarchy. (See a copy of DEFRA's "Guidance on Applying the Waste Hierarchy" at CD151). The table on page 6 of the guidance, which is dated June 2011, makes it clear that all energy recovery technologies, whether electricity only, heat only or heat and power combined, come higher in the waste hierarchy than disposal. Thus, the proposed waste treatment facility on the appeal site lies higher in the hierarchy than disposal.
…
I conclude on this issue that the proposal meets the requirement of RP Policy 38 for the management of waste to be taken up the waste hierarchy as defined in WS 2007. The proposal would also not prejudice the achievement of the higher recycling and composting target identified in RP Policy 38 for 2015. …
…
"Overall conclusion on the development plan and a consideration of benefits and harm
118. Gathering together my conclusions on the issues that I have identified in this case, I conclude that the proposal complies with the RP in providing a centralised facility for dealing with the waste management needs of this part of the region. The proposal also complies with the RP in that it would enable waste to be managed higher up the waste hierarchy and would not inhibit recycling or prevent the RP's recycling target or a higher target from being met. In considering the proposal against the various site specific impacts such as being compatible with the character and appearance of the locality, effect on the local highway network, impact on air quality and effect on health, I conclude that the proposal does not breach any RP, WLP [Waste Local Plan] or LP [Local Plan] policy. In short, I find that the proposal complies with the relevant policies in the development plan."
"…In terms of advantages, as relevant to this case [the Inspector] concluded in paragraph 120 that the development would enable the last major element of the city and county's joint waste strategy to be brought to fruition, would enable the city and county's residual municipal waste to be dealt with in a sustainable manner by reducing the volume of waste going to landfill, would provide for the separation of recyclable elements of waste that had missed kerbside collection of recyclable materials, and would put the bottom ash to use as a recyclate. He concluded in paragraph 121 that it would offer renewable energy benefits by exporting sufficient electricity to power 14,000 homes, so that it would be a source of renewable energy contributing to lowering the reliance on fossil fuels, and that it would offer the opportunity in the future for heat to be used by local industry in the form of either steam or hot water."
The judgment below
a) In referring to the application of the waste hierarchy in "such situations", "it is clear…that…he is referring to the situation he has just been addressing, namely where the plant as initially to be operated will not achieve the R1 threshold, but where it is likely that once it is up and running it will begin to operate as a CHP process and thus potentially achieve recovery status, and also where, in either scenario, it will recover some energy so that on a tenable view of matters it will achieve a better overall environmental outcome than disposal to landfill": [120(1)].
b) The Inspector was entitled to refer to DEFRA's 2011 guidance: [120(2)].
c) If it is a correct or even a reasonable interpretation of the two final sentences of DL [40] that the Inspector is concluding that the table in DEFRA's 2011 guidance shows that all energy recovery technologies, even those not meeting the R1 threshold, still fall within the category of recovery and not disposal, that does betray an error, or arguably an error, of interpretation and hence an error, or arguably an error, of law: [120(4)].
d) "…It is clear that these two sentences cannot reasonably be so interpreted. … [W]hat the Inspector is doing is to use the table as a convenient shorthand to make the point that even electricity only energy recovery (which falls into the disposal category) is a better environmental option [than] disposal to landfill, and that here the combination of initial electricity only operation and likely CHP operation once the plant is up and running mean that, all things considered, it lies higher up in the waste hierarchy than disposal to landfill, with no prospect of achieving greater energy efficiency through CHP operation and thus of achieving R1 status as this proposal. In that context, I accept the defendants' submission that 'disposal' is obviously shorthand for 'mere disposal to landfill'": [120(5)].
e) Read in isolation from the remainder of the decision and without reference to its context, i.e. the evidence and submissions presented to the Inspector, the interpretation for which Mr Simons contended "is a tenable one". "[W]hen the sentences are considered in context, as part of the overall decision on this issue, that interpretation is not one which is fairly tenable. I accept the defendants' submission that it flies in the face of the preceding paragraphs 37 – 39": [120(6)].
f) "When one goes on to read paragraph 48 and then paragraphs 118 and particularly 120 and 121 the matter is really put beyond doubt": [120(7)].
"if he had made such a finding, then it could only have been on the basis that he had made clear findings that it was more likely than not that the proposed waste treatment facility would begin to export heat once up and running, and thus that it was more likely than not that it would achieve the R1 threshold at that point. On that analysis, in my judgment, the decision that the proposal could properly be regarded as falling in the recovery category was neither irrational, perverse or Wednesbury unreasonable. I would take the view that these are conclusions of mixed law and fact which disclose no error of law and, in relation to the factual findings, are ones which [the Inspector] was reasonably entitled to reach."
The appellant's case
Conclusions
Lord Justice Briggs
Lord Justice Maurice Kay
Note 1 The other material parts of the policy framework are Planning Policy Statement 10: Planning for Sustainable Waste Management (“PPS 10”), DEFRA’s 2011 guidance on applying the waste hierarchy, and the Department of Energy and Climate Change’s “Energy from waste: a guide to the debate” (February 2013) (a document not available to the Inspector, but which was before the judge.) [Back]