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7:46am Friday 28th September 2007
Exclusive by Jess Bauldry and Lawrence Marzouk
The construction costs of a controversial incinerator project have more than doubled from original estimates.
A total of £145.7 million will now have to be paid by waste contractor Veolia just to prepare the site in Newhaven and to build the incinerator.
Last night Brighton and Hove City Council agreed to help Veolia meet its financial burden by extending the life of the contract from 25 to 30 years.
East Sussex County Council gave its backing to the deal on Tuesday.
Both councils took the decisions at secret meetings.
All councillors have refused to discuss the details of the arrangement although opinion was divided over whether details of such largescale spending should be released into the public domain.
A copy of the papers, leaked to Lewes MP Norman Baker, suggests that Veolia claimed that the waste contract, agreed four years ago, was no longer profitable and would have to be extended by five years.
Under the contract Veolia is liable for all increased costs to the project but councillors feared that without help the contractor would go bankrupt causing the project to collapse. Veolia faces a rise in construction costs from £71.7 million to £145.7 million.
The longer contract will give Veolia an extra £35 million in income.
Councillors feared that if they refused to extend the contract Veolia would walk away.
The project would then have to be put back out to tender and be likely to cost even more.
In the meantime, European rules would see the councils face big fines for failing to cut the amount of waste dumped in landfill sites. Extending the contract was the lesser of two evils - and some even regard it as a good result for the taxpayer over the long term.
The project is already two years behind schedule because of delays in submitting planning applications.
Both councils are so keen to see it completed they have also promised a blank cheque to Veolia for any legal costs that arise if opponents of the scheme challenge it in the courts.
The deadline for a "judicial review" is next January.
Veolia is also thought to have been granted an indemnity against costs if the incinerator project falls through, meaning it will get back at least some of the money it has spent so far. It is understood that councillors were told that the costs of not accepting Veolia's demands would have been significantly more than agreeing to the revised contract.
In 2003, a 25year contract was signed between East Sussex, Brighton and Hove and Veolia, the world's second biggest waste management operator.
The contract was dubbed a "25-year monopoly" by opponents and has attracted sustained opposition for plans to build a waste sorting centre in Hollingdean, Brighton, and the incinerator in Newhaven.
Despite protests, both schemes have cleared all major legal hurdles and work at the Brighton site has begun.
And even though the project has a £1 billion price tag almost nothing is known about the financing or the costs of the buildings or services.
Councillors were split last night on the decision to hush up the deal.
Councillor Keith Taylor, Green convenor, said: "Any significant changes to a public contract such as this should be explained to the public. "There is a fine balance to be struck between protecting commercially sensitive information and being accountable to the taxpayer."
Councillor Gill Mitchell, leader of the Labour group, said: "This decision to hold this debate in closed session was justified because matters concerning commercially confidential information were discussed and needed to be protected."
Conservative Mary Mears, deputy leader of the city council, refused to comment on the decision, saying only that the discussion contained financial figures that were confidential.
Liberal Democrat councillor Paul Elgood said: "Residents should be extremely concerned about what they're not being told by the council. We call on Brighton and East Sussex to make a full disclosure in the public interest."
Lewes MP Norman Baker plans to complain to the Audit Commission and the European Union.
He said: "This is a criminal waste of taxpayers' money and represents the Arthur Daley school of economics.
"The councils appear to be determined to throw good money after bad in their blinkered determination to bulldoze through this incinerator. They are recklessly gambling with our money."
Should the councils press on with the contract or start again from scratch? Have your say below.
Concerned, Brighton says...
8:46am Fri 28 Sep 07
Stroller, Hove says...
9:06am Fri 28 Sep 07
Karen, Brighton says...
10:49am Fri 28 Sep 07
Andy, says...
11:10am Fri 28 Sep 07
Karen wrote:No- you have fought against the inceinerator full stop. You are not looking out for the cost effectiveness of the solution for people like me, who think it is a good solution.
This is exactly why Dump the Dump and DOVE have fought so long and hard against this contract with Veolia.
ac, brighton says...
11:19am Fri 28 Sep 07
Bob, Brighton says...
11:29am Fri 28 Sep 07
Joëlle van Tinteren, Devon says...
12:17pm Fri 28 Sep 07
Alex, says...
12:23pm Fri 28 Sep 07
Graham, Seaford says...
1:02pm Fri 28 Sep 07
TEN YEARS OF DECAY, HOVE says...
1:24pm Fri 28 Sep 07
Chris, Brighton says...
1:29pm Fri 28 Sep 07
TEN YEARS OF DECAY wrote:Ask Norman Baker, he knows alot about these kind of dealings. "This is a criminal waste of taxpayers' money" So very rich Baker, so very rich.
Decisions taken behind closed doors,councillors refusing to discuss details taxpayers kept in the dark, and I thought we lived in a democracy.
singing monkey, Plumpton says...
1:42pm Fri 28 Sep 07
LB, Hove says...
2:59pm Fri 28 Sep 07
Peter, Saltdean says...
4:03pm Fri 28 Sep 07
sc, Brighton says...
4:04pm Fri 28 Sep 07
A total of £145.7 million will now have to be paid by waste contractor Veolia just to prepare the site in Newhaven and to build the incinerator.
Bob, Brighton says...
4:33pm Fri 28 Sep 07
Joëlle van Tinteren, Devon says...
4:47pm Fri 28 Sep 07
scorpion, Newhaven says...
4:55pm Fri 28 Sep 07
Bob, Brighton says...
5:09pm Fri 28 Sep 07
Alison Clish-Green, Devon says...
5:52pm Fri 28 Sep 07
Michael Ryan, Shrewsbury says...
7:06pm Fri 28 Sep 07
caroline, brighton says...
9:10pm Fri 28 Sep 07
philip smith, seaford says...
9:53pm Fri 28 Sep 07
David, says...
10:08pm Fri 28 Sep 07
Stephen, Brighton says...
9:20am Sat 29 Sep 07
Hamish, Newhaven says...
2:08pm Sat 29 Sep 07
singing monkey wrote:If there are so many benefits why isn't the incinerator built in Brighton or Shoreham??!!!
i think this could be just what Newhaven needs, the benefits of having the incenerator far outway the downsides. Newhaven is perfect for it.
singing monkey, plumpton says...
4:19pm Sat 29 Sep 07
jonny o, Worthing says...
7:15pm today Sat 29 Sep 07
janice Alderson, NEWHAVEN says...
10:53am Sun 30 Sep 07
Dawn Hornby, Manchester says...
10:58am Sun 30 Sep 07
JANICE ALDERSON, Newhaven says...
11:10am Sun 30 Sep 07
Bob, Brighton says...
12:34pm Sun 30 Sep 07
Flat Foot Soozie, Brusnwick Square says...
1:16pm Sun 30 Sep 07
Bob wrote:How many hours a day does your asyulm allow inmates to use the internet?
I think Gill Mitchel is marvellous, just wonderful. Nae Bevan would be proud of her and the local Parties activities. The Peoples Party.
Dave Oliver, Brighton says...
4:37pm Mon 1 Oct 07
Rob Whittle, Norwich says...
4:47pm Mon 1 Oct 07
Andy wrote:Andy, Is your comment rather spurious. Residual facility 150,000Tpa capacity. Cost for cost. SRMs MBT AD facility is costing £80m and £450m over 25 yrs at financial closure; compared to £145.1m and £1bn for 30 years. Maths degree not required!
Karen wrote: This is exactly why Dump the Dump and DOVE have fought so long and hard against this contract with Veolia.No- you have fought against the inceinerator full stop. You are not looking out for the cost effectiveness of the solution for people like me, who think it is a good solution.
Bill Tennent, Brighton says...
4:59pm Mon 1 Oct 07
Julie, Newhaven says...
11:35am Tue 2 Oct 07
Councillor Rachel Fryer, Brighton & HOve says...
10:20pm Tue 2 Oct 07
caroline wrote:I am shocked, livid and many things besides at this. I had some remote naive optimism that maybe Labour and the Tories did regret their decision to go ahead with the incinerator but felt financially tied to it.
As long as profit can be made out of waste, the public's health and the environment will always be secondary to these profit thirsty outfits such as Veolia. They are a business who's first and foremost priority is to make a profit for their shareholders. Our waste has to be dealt with by Non Profit making organisations if there is ever going to be an emphasis on putting the health and welfare of the public and the environment first. There is money to be made out of waste and the UK as a whole is suffering as a result of this. A change in policy is needed before the UK goes up in smoke. We owe it to our future generations to demand a fresh look at how we deal with waste and start by putting 'profit for shareholders' firmly onto the back burner. Instead of taking a collective act of diminished responsibility our council should be actively seeking how they can bring about this change and maybe their children /grandchildren could actually have something to thank them for ....
JANICE, newhaven says...
10:50pm Tue 2 Oct 07
ac, brighton says...
4:53pm Sat 6 Oct 07
JANICE, newhaven says...
10:18pm Tue 4 Dec 07
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Jim, Brighton says...
8:16am Fri 28 Sep 07
Why haven't the councils opened talks with the European Commission and our government to try to negotiate an exemption from landfill tax fines to allow for the possibility of re-tendering this contract. It seems to have been ever more badly managed with each revelation.
It has hard to escape the suspicion that the secrecy is really intended to conceal the two councils' blushes. If Veolia has no rival for the contract now, the information is much less commercially sensitive.
It is, though, politically sensitive because most local people don't want the waste transfer station or the incinerator.
Many people have valid concerns about air pollution as a result of both and their effects on our health and the health of our children.
The level of trust in Veolia and the councils is low, in part because Veolia has a vested interest in the outcome and because the councils are run by politicians - and that includes the senior officials.
Many people also worry that burning rubbish will undermine recycling efforts. Recycling may not be the answer to everything but a growing number of people realise the need to improve our recycling rates in the way that some other countries have already managed.
The councils must be openly honest about the incinerator and its costs - and sooner rather than later. The Argus must keep up the pressure for proper disclosure in the public interest.