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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 14 page paper looks at the plan to build a waste incinerator in the UK. The paper discusses the different issues that will be addressed when the company and the planning authority determine if the plan should go ahead. The write looks at the planning permission issues as well as the need for an environmental impact assessment. The potential contents and measures in the environmental impact assessment, both the base line and the scoping assessment, are discussed. The bibliography cites 8 sources.
Page Count:
14 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TS14_TEplanincin.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
lorries a day will visit the facility. The site is currently derelict, once the site Victorian terraced houses, but we are not told what the local environment around the site
is like. In order to determine whether or not the project to build the incinerator there are a number of consideration that need to be made by the planning committee
and the issues that need to be assessed as well as the way that the public need to be engaged in the decision making process may all have an impact
on the outcome. In order for the investment to go ahead it is necessary for the company to gain planning permission under section 54A of the Town and Country
Planning Act 1990, a section that was added in as a result of the Planning and Compensation Act 1991 (Lexis, 2008). Under this piece of legislation any planning decisions have
to be made in consideration of the local development plan. Not all decisions will have to be fully compliant with local plan, if there are significant contrary indicators planning permission
can be given to developments that are not in line with local development plan (Lexis, 2008). In determining whether or not this investment of an incineration plant should go ahead
there are some complications. The area that has been purchased ready for the development of the incineration plant is in need of regeneration, it is currently in a derelict state,
but it is also quite possible that it is located within, or near a residential area as the former buildings on the site were residential themselves. This means that the
plan may be changing the type of use of the land and if there are other residents in the area they could be adversely affected by this change. The
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