º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Economic Development

Company behind Swindon gas plant plans responds to criticism

Rivan Industries has lodged an application for permission to install its gas plant in a farmer's field

Rivan Wroughton(Image: Local Democracy Reporting Service / Rivan Industries)

The company aiming to produce renewable natural gas using innovative technology on a site north of Swindon which is surrounded by fields has addressed criticism.

Rivan Industries runs a test facility at Wroughton airfield and has submitted an application for permission to establish its gas plant in a farmer's field off Little Rose Lane, north of Blunsdon.

The proposal involves utilising a novel technology to generate gas by splitting molecules of both water and limestone and combining them, powered by electricity produced by an onsite solar farm.

In addition to the solar panels, the installation could comprise 22 shipping containers each 40 feet long, 11 water tanks, 11 gas storage domes standing 14-feet tall, and a car park for four vehicles, with the entire compound enclosed by a two-metre-high steel mesh fence.

The plans have received more than 60 responses from the public, local councillors, and the Council for the Protection of Rural England, with the majority opposing the proposals.

Common objections include concerns about traffic on small rural roads and lanes and the impact on a field in a rural setting.

However, Rivan Industries responded: "Our innovative Renewable Natural Gas (RNG) technology has the potential to revolutionise the decarbonisation of heavy industries that cannot otherwise be electrified, supporting the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ in its transition to a net zero future, and placing Swindon at the forefront of the green industrial revolution."

Little Rose Lane Blunsdon(Image: Local Democracy Reporting Service / Google Maps)

The company has released a statement outlining the perceived benefits of the project.