News
Damning report on biomass plant plan
AN ENVIRONMENTAL campaigning organisation has this week published a report on the biomass gasification power plant proposed by Egnedol in Milford Haven, claiming that it is a “highrisk, unproven technology,” and casting serious doubt on the company’s ability to successfully operate such a plant.

Biofuelwatch’s report highlights how similar attempts to build gasifiers in the UK have failed, and outlines the health and safety risks associated with the technology. It also points to the fact that Egnedol has no track record with any power station scheme, anywhere, ever, and has provided no evidence of having any expertise in operating such an unproven and highly challenging technology.
Egnedol, a Cypriotic-Welsh company, has announced that they will submit a planning application to Pembrokeshire County Council for a 49.9 MW power station which would gasify around 400,000 tonnes of wood a year. This application forms part of a much larger project, which Egnedol estimate would increase the power station capacity to 350 MW and include a wide range of business activities, such as fish and prawn farms, using the waste heat from the plant. No gasification plant of this type and scale exists anywhere in the world, according to the campaign group. As Biofuelwatch’s report shows, another UK company’s attempt to use gasification technology, albeit on a smaller scale, resulted in hundreds of breaches of their air emissions permit, dozens of noise complaints, an explosion and a fire.
Almuth Ernsting, Biofuelwatch Co-Director and author of the report told The Herald: “Our briefing exposes Egnedol as a company with no proven track record of delivering any projects at all, let alone ones involving unproven and challenging new technologies. It is important that local residents, the planning department and Councillors fully understand the public health risks involved in trying to operate such a plant.”
Egnedol state that half of the power station’s energy will be generated from waste wood, which is usually chemically treated and emits dangerous pollutants into the air when gasified. They say the remainder will be imported “super trees,” grown in plantations in Morocco and Greece. However, the website of the company that Egnedol claims it will source these trees from, shows that they are still waiting for permission to plant such trees in Greece and have no current plans to plant any in Morocco.
Campaigners are calling for the proposal to be rejected. Director of Friends of the Earth Cymru, Gareth Chubb said: “The people of Pembrokeshire won’t like being guinea pigs for an unproven technology with uncertain risks to human health using wood from nonexistent forests. Companies like Egnedol have talked up this type of proposal for a long time but we’ve never seen a successful venture of this nature in the UK. This proposal should be rejected.”
Biofuelwatch’s report which highlights Egnedol’s claims that hundreds of jobs will be created; may well come to nothing. The vast majority of the 560 jobs which Egnedol claim they will create would come from the additional business activities, are unviable without an uninterrupted supply of waste heat. Prawns and warm-water fish, for example, would instantly die if the gasifier had to be shut down for unplanned repairs – yet, as the report shows, frequent shut downs and repairs are the norm, not the exception, for gasification power plants.
Our questions to Egnedol still remain unanswered
THE QUESTIONS posed below were sent to Egnedol, the company claiming to be ready to invest hundreds of millions of pounds in Milford Haven, by The Herald.
At the presentation given at Milford Haven Town Hall on the evening of January 25, your spokesperson referred to feedstock for the plant coming from Morocco and Greece. I am informed that some two weeks after that meeting you still have not answered an enquiry as to how many hectares of land are under cultivation in those countries, nor identified the species of plant being grown there.
I noted that you also told the Town Council you will produce 2 million kilos of prawns a year at the site. Please advise what plans for transporting such a significant cargo to and from Blackbridge you intend to put in place.
In relation to the cheese plant, which also formed part of your presentation, bearing in mind the global fall in milk prices and the downward pressure on farmgate prices, what arrangements have you made to acquire contracts for the cheese wholesale and the arrangements you propose to make to transport milk and cheese to and from the site.
I note an article in the Cyprus Mail referring to Egnedol Ltd Mr Antoniades is reported to have said: “… garbage – plastic, organic materials, metals, and so on – is not garbage,” Antoniades explained. “To us, that’s energy. That’s profit.”
Please confirm whether the plant proposed at Blackbridge would be able to burn ‘garbage – plastic, organic materials, metals, and so on’. If it would, please confirm what mitigation arrangements Egnedol proposes to put in place for dioxin and heavy metals pollution from burning such waste.
Please identify the location in Wales of the 450m Euro contract Mr Antoniades told the Cyprus Mail Egnedol had obtained by October 2014.
Mr Antoniades is reported to have told The Cyprus Mail: “.. we asked for a confidentiality agreement before showing them around our UK facility,” Antoniades said. “We never heard back from them after that.”
To which UK facility did Mr Antoniades refer?
For the avoidance of any doubt on your part, please identify the location of the plant in the UK that Egnedol told the Cypriot Government it operated in Spring 2014.
As it is proposed to ship in plant material from the Mediterranean to Blackbridge to be burned as fuel, please confirm the carbon cost of shipping compared the carbon saving from consumption of the plant material.
We propose to provide ample space for your answers to all of the above.
I look forward to your full and prompt reply. As most of these questions refer to claims already made in public by your company, its directors and/or representatives, I do not anticipate that the answers will take long.
Please note: the questions will be published with answers if they are provided and without answers if they are not forthcoming.
If you are unable or unwilling to respond, please provide a statement to that effect
Without answering the questions asked, Steve Whitehouse, Director of Egnedol Ltd told The Herald: “Our proposed sustainable energy facility has been designed to comply fully with European and UK guidelines with respect to sustainable energy production.
“Both the UK and European Government agree that using short rotation biomass crops to create energy via advanced conversion systems, offers an excellent opportunity to reduce our reliance on fossil fuels and to ensure energy security.
“We are looking forward to working with the community to bring this showcase development to fruition.
“A copy of the Environmental Impact Assessment for the project will be posted on the company website at www.egnedol.co.uk when the planning application is submitted. Feedback forms will be provided on the website to enable members of the public to comment on the application.”
Health
Crumbling NHS faces £1bn repairs bill in Wales
Senedd election promises collide with the harsh reality of ageing hospitals, fire safety concerns and a maintenance crisis stretching across the country
WALES’ NHS is facing a repair and maintenance crisis of almost £1bn, with some of the country’s biggest hospitals burdened by ageing buildings, serious safety concerns and growing pressure on already stretched budgets.
New figures covering 210 NHS sites show that the backlog of work classed as high risk or significant risk has now reached £917m — up 71% in just four years.
The data, published for 2024-25 by NHS Wales Shared Services Partnership, shows more than £616m of the total relates to serious problems at 12 of Wales’ 13 main hospitals.
Ysbyty Gwynedd has the biggest backlog of high and significant risk repairs at £110.5m, followed closely by University Hospital of Wales in Cardiff, where the figure stands at £106.8m.
The scale of the problem is not just financial. Three hospitals — Bronglais, Prince Philip and Ysbyty Gwynedd — have 40% or more of their space rated as not fire safety compliant. At Ysbyty Gwynedd, 35% of space is also not regarded as health and safety compliant.
Aging estate
The figures highlight the deep-rooted problem of an ageing NHS estate across Wales.
More than 30 NHS sites have buildings where over half the estate predates the creation of the NHS in 1948. Another 17 sites, including University Hospital of Wales and Bronglais Hospital, are mainly made up of buildings between 50 and 60 years old.
Only one major hospital in Wales — the Grange Hospital near Cwmbran — is said to have no maintenance backlog. But even that project, which cost £350m, was first proposed in 2004 and only opened during the Covid pandemic, showing how long major hospital developments can take.
When the wider risk-adjusted backlog is considered across all NHS buildings in Wales, focusing on problems where safety may be at risk, the total cost rises to more than £1bn.
The largest overall figure is in the Betsi Cadwaladr health board area, where the backlog stands at nearly £278m.
Despite the Grange being one of the newest hospitals in Wales, Aneurin Bevan health board still faces a backlog of almost £233m, much of it linked to older sites including the Royal Gwent and Nevill Hall hospitals.
In Hywel Dda, where hopes of a new west Wales hospital remain some way off, the total backlog has reached £221m. Among the worst affected sites is Glangwili Hospital in Carmarthen, where high and significant risk repairs and maintenance amount to £82m.
West Wales pressure
FOR west Wales, the figures are especially troubling.
Hywel Dda residents have already faced years of uncertainty over the future of hospital services, and the scale of the maintenance bill raises fresh questions about how long ageing buildings can continue to serve local communities safely and effectively.
Bronglais Hospital is among the sites with major fire safety compliance concerns, while Glangwili carries one of the largest repair backlogs in the region.
The growing cost of patching up older hospitals will inevitably intensify the political argument over whether ministers should prioritise maintaining existing buildings or push ahead with long-promised new developments.
The chair of Cardiff and Vale health board recently acknowledged that the age and condition of University Hospital of Wales was affecting morale and efficiency, describing the quality and upkeep of buildings as an ongoing concern.
Expert warning
Mark Dayan, a policy analyst at the Nuffield Trust, said Wales had a worryingly large maintenance backlog by any standard.
He warned that poor infrastructure could directly affect the way care is delivered, making it harder for the NHS to reorganise services, improve patient flow or create safe, modern working environments.
The issue is not unique to Wales. NHS England is facing its own enormous repair backlog, estimated at £16bn. But in Wales, where budgets are tighter and hospital plans often move slowly, the pressure is especially acute.
Election battleground
WITH the Senedd election set for Thursday, May 7, parties are offering different solutions to the growing crisis.
Labour has pledged a £4bn Hospitals of the Future fund, promising new hospitals including replacements for Wrexham Maelor Hospital and University Hospital of Wales, as well as a major development in west Wales.
Plaid Cymru says Labour’s sums do not add up, and argues urgent high-risk repairs should come first.
Reform UK says the Welsh Government should concentrate its capital budget on clearing the maintenance backlog rather than making promises on multiple new hospitals.
The Conservatives say they would declare a health emergency and expand capacity through new community hospitals, diagnostic centres and surgical hubs.
The Liberal Democrats say they would upgrade the worst parts of the NHS estate while backing a replacement for University Hospital of Wales, linking investment to wider reform of social care and community services.
The Green Party has called the backlog a disgrace and says it would launch a multi-year programme to bring NHS facilities up to a safe and modern standard.
Whatever the result in May, the next Welsh Government will inherit a stark reality: before it can deliver a new generation of hospitals, it must first confront the spiralling cost of keeping the current estate from falling further into decline.
Entertainment
That’ll Be the Day celebrates ruby anniversary in style
A MUCH-LOVED theatrical tradition returned to Folly Farm on Friday and Saturday, October 24 and 25, 2025, as That’ll Be the Day celebrated its ruby anniversary in memorable style, raising £5,469 for The Paul Sartori Foundation.
The charity performances were filled with celebration and significance. Saturday night marked the 40th performance of the show at Folly Farm’s Follies Theatre, staged in the 40th year of That’ll Be the Day itself — a remarkable double milestone that was warmly received by the audience.
The anniversary weekend captured everything people have come to love about the production, from its crowd-pleasing musical numbers and toe-tapping hits to its trademark comedy sketches and strong sense of community.

There was also an emotional note to the occasion, as the weekend was billed as Trevor’s final on-stage performance with the show. Or was it? Although retirement had been suggested, Phil Thompson has since confirmed that Trevor will be back this year — to the delight of fans.
As one chapter closes, another begins, and excitement is already building for the future. That’ll Be the Day will return in 2026, with performances confirmed for October 30 and 31. Tickets are now on sale.
Audiences can expect new voices, a refreshed format, and the same talent and showmanship that Pembrokeshire audiences know and love.
Supporters keen to see the next chapter of this musical extravaganza can buy tickets through the Paul Sartori website, by calling the events team on 01437 763223, or in person at Dale’s Music in Tenby or Rock ‘n’ Rolla in Narberth.
If the ruby anniversary weekend proved anything, it is that That’ll Be the Day continues to shine, shimmy and entertain — all while helping to support hospice-at-home care in Pembrokeshire.
If you want, I can also turn this into a more polished newspaper-style piece with a headline and subheading.
Entertainment
Will You Be My Friend? BBC series seeks Welsh children
NEW six-part BBC One programme is looking for five to eight-year-olds across Wales who are finding it hard to make friends
A NEW BBC television series is looking for children across Wales aged between five and eight who are finding it hard to make friends.
Will You Be My Friend? is a new six-part series for BBC One and iPlayer from Five Mile Films, the makers of Channel 4’s The Dog House. The programme will focus on children who are struggling socially, whether through shyness, feeling left out, or finding it difficult to connect with others their own age.
The series will centre on what producers call The Friendship Centre, where a team of psychologists will help children build confidence and social skills to form real and lasting friendships.
Each child will then be sensitively matched with a potential new friend from their local area for a play date. Six weeks later, the programme will return to see how their new-found confidence has helped them at school, in the playground and beyond.
The production team says the series aims to explore the challenge of friendship in modern childhood, at a time when many families remain concerned about loneliness, social confidence, screen time and the lingering effects of the Covid pandemic.
Emma Loach, Interim Head of Commissioning, Documentaries at the BBC, said: “The longing to connect, to be seen, and to belong is universal.
“Whether you’re five or fifty-five, I defy anyone to watch these children without seeing a little bit of themselves reflected.
“In a world that can feel increasingly disconnected, this series shows that the simplest gestures – a smile, a shared joke, a tentative ‘will you be my friend?’ – still have the power to change everything. Five Mile Films has brought us something very special, and we couldn’t be prouder to give it a home on the BBC.”
Nick Mirsky, CEO of Five Mile Films, said: “I don’t think there’s a commission I could be more thrilled to bring to Five Mile. Will You Be My Friend? will be joyful, warm and funny, but it also does something genuinely new – inviting us to look closely at the challenge and art of making friends.”
Filming is due to take place in July and August, and producers are now inviting applications from families in Wales who feel their child could benefit from taking part.
The series is being made by Five Mile Films for BBC One and iPlayer, with All3Media International acting as international partner.
Parents or guardians who would like more information or wish to apply can visit: bemyfriend.tv
Based on the press release and fact sheet you uploaded.
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David Robinson
March 7, 2016 at 8:39 pm
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2016/mar/03/uea-abandons-ambitious-biomass-scheme
Just to prove how difficult it is to get a Biomass Pyrolysis Gasifier plant to produce syngas safely. See the link above regarding the University of East Anglia being unable to operate a similar Biomass Gasifier, even after years of trying.
Herald journalism removing the Smoke & Mirrors. Well done.
rent private jet
January 3, 2026 at 4:28 am
I appreciate the practical advice you’ve given here.