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Manufacturing

30 new wagons heading to Drax as power giant turns to º£½ÇÊÓÆµ railfreight manufacturer

New order placed with original supplier as efficiencies achieved to make suplpy chain more sustainable

Drax biomass wagons arrive at the power station's reception facility. Even more efficient models are now on the way - with the first 30 ordered.(Image: Drax Group)

Power giant Drax has invested in 30 new rail wagons to deliver greater volumes of biomass to its huge generating plant.

The company, behind renewable power for four million º£½ÇÊÓÆµ homes, commissioned a next generation design to build on the original fleet of 225 - then the first in the world.

Designed by Lloyd’s Register Rail - now Ricardo Rail - and built by WH Davis in Mansfield, the new wagons will each be able to carry 30 per cent more feedstock. It will take the total to 71.6 tonnes, reducing the number of rail journeys required, in doing so making the supply chain more resilient, efficient and lowering emissions.

Read more: 250 electric buses to be introduced to º£½ÇÊÓÆµ public transport fleets after £60m funding deal success

The first wagons are expected to roll off the production line early next year and go into operation on the Port of Tyne to Drax route.

Bruce Heppenstall, Drax plant director, said: “Our biomass trains deliver up to 30,000 tonnes of biomass to the power station each day, enabling Drax to power millions of homes and businesses across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ with reliable, renewable electricity and support energy security.

“It’s therefore vital that we have a robust supply chain and investing in these new wagons will further increase our resilience and cut carbon emissions on our Tyne to Drax rail route by more than a quarter, whilst continuing to support thousands of jobs across the North, including at WH Davis and Davis Wagon Services’ facilities.”

The latter, based in Immingham - one of the feeder ports for the transatlantic forestry residues - opened a dedicated rail yard at Ferrybridge to maintain the fleet in an £850,000 investment back in 2018.