The current owner of the site,
BFL Management Ltd, plan to bring the site back into use as a £750 million green energy park. There are additional plans to create additional recycling and green energy facilities on site, including an
anaerobic digester, a waste processing plant, a
biomass combined heat and power generator, a
pyrolysis plant and a peak demand 30MW diesel generator. As of 2023-24 a battery storage facility was in process of being constructed, part of this was operational in January 2024. When fully operational, the park could provide up to 1,400MW of power, employing 100 full-time equivalents, with up to 500 jobs in the construction phase. ==References==