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  • In the beautiful new limelight, Bay Hotel Open Mic Night to be held twice a month

  • PICTURES OF THE WEEK : Royal Box Office, in the Circle of Fire and Light

  • TONIGHT: Performance group to fill the sky with fire and light at launch party for public house in Pevensey

  • Coming to stay and spend in Wealden: Number of people working in local tourism rises to just over 9,000

  • University of Sussex student inventor of 'marine bioplastic' wins International James Dyson Award 2019

  • Operating efficiencies at Wealden District Council: Cost of providing Council services to each individual living in the District

  • Have your say on next phase of improvements in Eastbourne town centre

  • Castle Inn for Christmas: Full schedule for the season revealed

  • Young people in East Sussex: Top tips to help parents and carers support kids’ mental wellbeing

  • Rother District Council: Parking charges suspended in run up to Christmas

  • LOCAL GOVERNMENT CHRONICLE: Wealden District Council shortlisted for national 'entrepreneurial' award

  • Research begins on St. Agnes', Pevensey Bay, the pioneering childrens' home from home: Memories of Janet Eldridge 1957—1960, "the beach was our playground"

  • ** BREAKING: Michelle Buxton, Brexit Party candidate for the constituency of Bexhill and Battle in General Election (with 316 more candidates) withdrawn from contest by her leader Nigel Farage

  • Tuesday 19 November: Pevensey Parish Council: Keeping us posted: Parish Council Surgery

  • Free travel on Remembrance Sunday for Armed Forces, veterans and cadets on Southern, Gatwick Express, Thameslink and Great Northern

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THIS WEEK Coming to stay and spend in Wealden


COMMUNITY Bay Hotel Open Mic Night to be held twice a month


LETTERS Mint House: Village has a vibrant art scene, but few opportunities to display work

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image credit: Sovereign Centre: Eastbourne 2017

Eastbourne Cabinet councillors (11 September) approved feasibility work for a low-carbon scheme to heat the Sovereign Leisure Centre by extracting energy from the local sewer system.

The proposal is for a standalone energy centre on the seafront site to meet the centre’s heat requirements and help achieve the council’s vision to deliver a carbon neutral town by 2030.

Councillor Jonathan Dow, Cabinet Member for the Environment, said: “This highly innovative scheme provides the opportunity to take a significant step towards reducing the town’s carbon footprint, which is a key facet of council projects and services.

“The energy centre would be built to cope with extra demand in the future and could be developed to provide heat for other types of development, giving the scheme flexibility and the potential for significantly reduced running costs.”

The system would comprise two heat pumps which together will be able to meet the varying demands of the leisure centre.

The proposal would be to obtain heat by taking the liquid sewage from the nearby underground main sewer and passing it over a heat exchanger which extracts this heat and transfers it to where it is needed.

Feasibility and design work will now be carried out and if viable, a report will be made to Cabinet in February 2020.

Cllr Dow added: “The feasibility work is now underway and being delivered through our Clear Sustainable Futures (CSF) framework. I look forward to receiving a report at Cabinet where we will make a decision on next steps.”

CSF is a procurement and delivery framework between Eastbourne Borough Council, Lewes District Council, AECOM and Robertson.

Jonny Burke, innovation consultant for Bluewave at Southern Water, said: “We’re absolutely delighted to be part of this hugely innovative scheme to help create a carbon neutral town by 2030.

“We’ve been working closely with the council and SHARC – the technology company behind transferring heat from sewers – over the last two years and it ties in with our own ambitions to create resource hubs, re-using energy for a more environmentally smart and friendly future.”