enfinium has opened its new £500m Energy-from-Waste plant at its Skelton Grange facility in Leeds.
Designed and built by global green technology company Kanadevia Inova, enfinium says the Skelton Grange facility will divert up to 410,000 tonnes of unrecyclable waste from landfill every year and generate up to 49MW of homegrown energy.
In 2024, enfinium says it diverted over 2.3 million tonnes of unrecyclable waste from landfill.
Skelton Grange will also be able to supply electricity to provide baseload power to nearby users without the need for grid connections.
enfinium says the Skelton Grange facility will divert up to 410,000 tonnes of unrecyclable waste from landfill every year.
enfinium invested £500m in the development of the site in Leeds, which created over 400 jobs during its construction phase. Now operational, enfinium says the site will employ 40 people in full-time roles.
Commenting on the launch, Mike Maudsley, CEO of enfinium, said: “Commencing operations at our Skelton Grange facility is a major step forward in our strategy to deliver homegrown energy and decarbonisation powered by waste.
“Skelton Grange will play a key role in building a more circular economy by turning unrecyclable waste into homegrown electricity and heat to supply nearby businesses and homes across Leeds.”
enfinium has also launched a new £100,000 Skelton Grange Philanthropic and Community Fund, which will provide support to community and environmental projects.
In February 2025, it was announced that the Aire Valley Heat and Power Network, a low-carbon heating and electricity scheme in Leeds, was awarded £19.5 million in funding from the Government’s Green Heat Network Fund.
The scheme will harness heat from enfinium’s Skelton Grange facility to offer heating to local businesses.
Hilary Benn MP, Member of Parliament for Leeds South, commented: “Once the site of a coal-fired power station, this new energy recovery facility is a symbol of both the site’s economic renewal and a new way of generating power.
“This new Skelton Grange facility will take unrecyclable waste otherwise destined for landfill and use this instead to produce electricity and heat, as well as (recover) metals and other useful materials to support a circular economy.”