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'''Teesside Energy from Waste plant''' (also known as '''Teesside WTE power station''' or '''Haverton Hill incinerator''') is a municipal [[waste]] [[incinerator]] and [[waste-to-energy]] [[power station]], which provides 29.2 [[megawatt]]s (MW) of electricity for the [[National Grid (UK)|National Grid]] by burning 390,000 tonnes of household and commercial waste a year. It is located on the [[River Tees]] at [[Haverton Hill]], east of [[Billingham]] in [[North East England]]. Developed and built by NEM, a subsidiary of Northumbrian Water, the initial plant replaced the [[Portrack Incinerator]] and opened in 1998. Subsequently, the facility became part of SITA, now Suez.
The station is one of the most modern incinerators operating in England; it is noted for its innovative operation. In 2009, an extension was completed at the station, with the construction of an extra furnace line and a [[rail head]]. This increased the capacities of the plant from 19.2 MW and 250,000 tonnes of waste per year to its current levels. The plant initially received from Teesside and North Tyneside, but this was extended to include [[Northumberland]] with the 2009 extension.
A second plant, the '''North East Energy Recovery Centre''' (NEERC), has been built on land adjacent to the first plant. This extends the site's catchment to include waste from south [[Tyne and Wear]].
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