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Milford Haven: No planning application made for Blackbridge

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blackbridgeTHE COMPANY behind a controversial scheme to burn biomass fuel, including waste, at a site in Milford Haven has yet to submit a planning application, The Herald can reveal.

At a public presentation in Milford Haven last month Egnedol, claimed that the pyrolysis plant would begin operation in summer 2017. However, a letter from the Monitoring Officer for Pembrokeshire County Council’s Planning Department has disclosed that: ‘A planning application will not be submitted to Pembrokeshire County Council. ‘The proposal is for Development of National Significance and therefore the application will be made to the Welsh Government. No application to Welsh Government has been made as yet’.

In neighbouring Carmarthenshire, an application for a smaller pyrolysis plant was rejected by the County Council’s planning committee, after it emerged that the technology being used was untested, there had been no proper assessment of the potential for pollution, and that the company promoting the scheme had never constructed such a scheme before submitting its plans. Egnedol has claimed success with its technology elsewhere, including in the UK, but has never produced a single jot of evidence to support its claims.

In relation to pyrolysis plants being used to generate electricity, four applications in England have been granted, three rejected, while one was withdrawn shortly before an appeal hearing relating to its refusal. However, no permit applications had been made in relation to the plants’ capacity to burn waste, and that all the applications for those permits – in both Scotland and England – had been pulled around the same time. No other plants of this type are, therefore, either built or operational in the UK.

7 Comments

7 Comments

  1. Penny Joubert

    March 14, 2016 at 7:48 am

    What IS going on then? This company has virtually no assets and the whole set up was conducted in a very suspect way. Why would a company say they had bought a large piece of land and intended this horrendous development based on unsound financial processes and weird and wonderful untruths? There was talk of foreign investors etc etc and a multi million pound purchase investment before planning application had even been submitted!! Scratching the surface of this proposed project left one feeling that it was a very elaborate hoax, but one which could, if effected, have disastrous impact on the local area and environment.
    This project should be investigated to locate the true meaning of its function. Money laundering? Distraction whilst something more distasteful happens elsewhere? Some investigative journalism wouldn’t go amiss.

  2. Peter Warrender

    March 14, 2016 at 10:27 am

    There is so much scientific evidence on-line to the health risks and dangers of Biomass plants world wide. I hope the proposals of these polluting, forest destroying monstrosities are dropped. We should demand truly renewable clean energy projects/jobs for Pembrokeshire.

  3. Flashbang

    March 14, 2016 at 11:06 am

    Who in PCC sold them the land so cheaply? There are a lot of questions that need answers and Jamie Adams should be held accountable as he was leader when the sale went through.

  4. Owen Llewellyn

    March 15, 2016 at 4:44 am

    The whole scheme is a festering lump of something that could be politely described as male bovine biomass.

  5. Mayday

    March 15, 2016 at 9:33 pm

    The land was sold by the Welsh Government not PCC. Designating the site as National Significance unfortunately puts the planning decision with them too. Objectors should be lobbying our current MPs and future AMs to make sure they are aware of concerns. Orthios have similar projects proposed for Anglesey and Port Talbot and a similar inexperience backed by Chinese investment funds. If these biomass plants are such great things why aren’t they being built in China, Jordan (Egnedol funds source) or Greece/Morocco (source of wood chips). I’m sure these places need electricity, cheese and prawns too. A cynic might suggest the developers are just looking to extract a large lump of EU funding before collapsing.

  6. car Lyric

    July 19, 2017 at 12:50 pm

    How adorable

  7. isai fritz

    October 8, 2025 at 9:22 pm

    Looking forward to your next post! Watch equidia quinté — live horse racing, Quinté+ analysis, pronostics, replays, and results. HD streaming with expert commentary and a comprehensive programme guide.

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Crime

Swansea man dies weeks after release from troubled HMP Parc: Investigation launched

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A SWANSEA man has died just weeks after being released from HMP Parc, the Bridgend prison now at the centre of a national crisis over inmate deaths and post-release failures.

Darren Thomas, aged 52, died on 13 November 2025 — less than a month after leaving custody. The Prisons and Probation Ombudsman (PPO) has confirmed an independent investigation into his death, which is currently listed as “in progress”.

Born on 9 April 1973, Mr Thomas had been under post-release supervision following a period at HMP/YOI Parc, the G4S-run prison that recorded seventeen deaths in custody in 2024 — the highest in the UK.

His last known legal appearance was at Swansea Crown Court in October 2024, where he stood trial accused of making a threatening phone call and two counts of criminal damage. During the hearing, reported by The Pembrokeshire Herald at the time, the court heard he made threats during a heated call on 5 October 2023.

Mr Thomas denied the allegations but was found guilty on all counts. He was sentenced to a custodial term, which led to his imprisonment at HMP Parc.

Parc: A prison in breakdown

HMP Parc has faced sustained criticism throughout 2024 and 2025. A damning unannounced inspection in January found:

  • Severe self-harm incidents up 190%
  • Violence against staff up 109%
  • Synthetic drugs “easily accessible” across wings
  • Overcrowding at 108% capacity

In the first three months of 2024 alone, ten men died at Parc — part of a wider cluster of twenty PPO-investigated deaths since 2022. Six occurred within three weeks, all linked to synthetic drug use.

Leaked staff messages in 2025 exposed a culture of indifference, including one officer writing: “Let’s push him to go tomorrow so we can drop him.”

Six G4S employees have been arrested since 2023 in connection with alleged assaults and misconduct.

The danger after release

Deaths shortly after release from custody are a growing national concern. Ministry of Justice data shows 620 people died while under community supervision in 2024–2025, with 62 deaths occurring within 14 days of release.

Short sentences — common at Parc — leave little time for effective rehabilitation or release planning. Homelessness, loss of drug tolerance and untreated mental-health conditions create a high-risk environment for those newly released.

The PPO investigates all such deaths to determine whether prisons or probation failed in their duties. Reports often take 6–12 months and can lead to recommendations.

A system at breaking point

The crisis at Parc reflects wider failures across UK prisons and probation. A July 2025 House of Lords report described the service as “not fit for purpose”. More than 500 people die in custody annually, with campaigners warning that private prisons such as Parc prioritise cost-cutting over care.

The PPO investigation into the death of Darren Thomas continues.

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Crime

Woman stabbed partner in Haverfordwest before handing herself in

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A WOMAN who stabbed her partner during a drug-fuelled episode walked straight into Haverfordwest Police Station and told officers what she had done, Swansea Crown Court has heard.

Amy Woolston, 22, of Dartmouth Street in Milford Haven, arrived at the station at around 8:00pm on June 13 and said: “I stabbed my ex-partner earlier… he’s alright and he let me walk off,” prosecutor Tom Scapens told the court.

The pair had taken acid together earlier in the day, and Woolston claimed she believed she could feel “stab marks in her back” before the incident.

Police find victim with four wounds

Officers went to the victim’s home to check on him. He was not there at first, but returned shortly afterwards. He appeared sober and told police: “Just a couple of things,” before pointing to injuries on his back.

He had three stab or puncture wounds to his back and another to his bicep.

The victim said that when he arrived home from the shop, Woolston was acting “a bit shifty”. After asking if she was alright, she grabbed something from the windowsill — described as either a knife or a shard of glass — and stabbed him.

He told officers he had “had worse from her before”, did not support a prosecution, and refused to go to hospital.

Defendant has long history of violence

Woolston pleaded guilty to unlawful wounding. The court heard she had amassed 20 previous convictions from 10 court appearances, including assaults, battery, and offences against emergency workers.

Defending, Dyfed Thomas said Woolston had longstanding mental health problems and had been off medication prescribed for paranoid schizophrenia at the time.
“She’s had a difficult upbringing,” he added, saying she was remorseful and now compliant with treatment.

Woolston was jailed for 12 months, but the court heard she has already served the equivalent time on remand and will be released imminently on a 12-month licence.

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News

BBC apologises to Herald’s editor for inaccurate story

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THE BBC has issued a formal apology and amended a six-year-old article written by BBC Wales Business Correspondent Huw Thomas after its Executive Complaints Unit ruled that the original headline and wording gave an “incorrect impression” that Herald editor Tom Sinclair was personally liable for tens of thousands of pounds in debt.

The 2019 report, originally headlined “Herald newspaper editor Tom Sinclair has £70,000 debts”, has now been changed.

The ECU found: “The wording of the article and its headline could have led readers to form the incorrect impression that the debt was Mr Sinclair’s personal responsibility… In that respect the article failed to meet the BBC’s standards of due accuracy.”

Mr Sinclair said: “I’m grateful to the ECU for the apology and for correcting the personal-liability impression that caused real harm for six years. However, the article still links the debts to ‘the group which publishes The Herald’ when in fact they related to printing companies that were dissolved two years before the Herald was founded in 2013. I have asked the BBC to add that final clarification so the record is completely accurate.”

A formal apology and correction of this kind from the BBC is extremely rare, especially for a story more than six years old. 

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