From
the BBC» :
A recycling centre which will reprocess 30,0000 tonnes of old railway track is to be built in Wiltshire.
Network Rail said it hopes to open the ^8m facility in Westbury by spring 2010. The plant, which will create 20 jobs, will recycle a quarter of all Britain's disused rail stock. Most of the material will arrive on trains.
Martin Ellwood, a director of Network Rail said: "The 21st century railway will also be an eco-friendly railway."
The centre will also recycle 110,000 disused concrete sleepers which will either be reused on the railway across the Western route or sold on for such things as agriculture and road paving. Rails and fittings will be processed into the scrap metal market and used in steel manufacturing.
Network Rail promised any heavy goods using the new plant will only travel via designated HGV routes.
The firm has moved protected lizard species, including slow worms, found at the site to a protected area and have consulted environmental experts to ensure their plans do not disturb nearby bat roosts.
A kilometre of new rail track will be laid to bring the recycling material to the 12-acre site.