A number of the ambitious development projects being touted by the Avocet Group of companies as far back as 2017, and which shareholders were told would produce tens of millions of pounds of income for the business have yet to reach the construction stage.
As Not Just Sheep & Rugby reported recently a number of truly eye-watering predictions of profit were being dangled before investors by Group chairman Martin Frost. They were contained in a number of circulars to 650 shareholders with stakes in a business involved in the 'disruptive technology' fields of fuel additives and hydroponic agriculture.
Three of the significant proposals for generating income were to be located in Tipperary, on Tees-side and in North Northumberland. But none of them appear to have got underway so far.
In July 2017 a delegation from Avocet visited Lisheen, near the village of Moyne in the Republic of Ireland, the site earmarked for one of the company's flagship schemes. Personnel from Avocet met with representatives of Tipperary County Council, presumably to discuss the details of a major initiative, and posed for a photograph to mark the occasion.
Lisheen mine was a lead and zinc mine where extraction had ceased in November 2015 after 17 years in operation.
According to the Avocet literature: "While surface and underground rehabilitation has been in
progress, the mining company has actively collaborated with the local
authorities in finding possible users for a site that is well served by power,
water, and waste disposal infrastructure. The EU, Irish and Tipperary vision is
of a bio-economy campus powered by the wind turbines that dot the neighbouring
landscape and situated in an area of natural beauty. Avocet ticks all the
bio-economy boxes and so is a perfect match."
Avocet was said to be conducting a feasibility study to assess the economics from Avocet’s
perspective. Shareholders were told: "Simply put, Avocet has the resources and partners to prompt a
100-million-euro investment into Lisheen, What Avocet needs to understand is
will the EU; the Irish Government, Tipperary Council and others match in whole
or in part Lisheen’s proposed bio – economy?"
When asked to comment on the Avocet project this week, a Tipperary County Council spokesperson said:"The council can confirm that no public funds were committed by Tipperary County Council to Avocet projects".
Meanwhile there has also been a lack of apparent progress at Seal Sands on Tees-side, the venue for a 'small scale' production plant capable of "avocet additive sales of some £8 million for
2019 rising to £80 million by 2021 - such can facilitate some £400 million pounds worth of blended avocet / methanol
fuel by 2021."
Here's what Mr Frost and his fellow directors said about the scale of the North-east England venture in March 2018: "Projected
estimated capital and setting up cost of proposed Seal Sands plant is between
£16 to £20 million of which Avocet Fuel Systems Plc via Avocet Infinite Plc
will need to put up between £2 and £4 million with an anticipated £10 million
in grant funding supported by £6 to £8 million in unsecured low-cost government
loans."
A third project in the Avocet portfolio was centred on Newburn, a 60-acre farm a few miles from Berwick-on-Tweed, and a property with "recently lapsed planning permission for an abattoir and anaerobic digestion unit.
"Avocet has
agreed (subject to planning) to acquire Newburn farm with the prime purpose of exclusively
slaughtering all its own Piemontese cattle
and thereafter storing and marketing
all its beef. Piemontese cattle are easily stressed and so
as with deer/venison, special
handling and de-stressing
practices need to be used."
The
plan was to put through 1,000 cattle
in 2019, 2,000 in 2020, 3,000 in 2021 and settling down from
2022 to 4,000 per annum or some 80 carcases per week.
"The source
of the Piemontese cattle will
broadly be 50% British and 50%
Irish.The planned 2022 sales turnover of
Avocet Farms will be some
£20 million per annum giving
a gross sales margin in excess of 40% to
which an additional retail sales margin of £10 million needs to be factored to cover the butchery, storage, and direct marketing of the meat."
Northumberland County Council planning department files show permission was granted for an abattoir to be developed at Newburn Holdings in 2005 with a condition that work should start within three years. But there is no record of any subsequent applications to revive the abattoir proposal.
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