Concerns over Drax's sustainability claims revealed in court documents.
The UK's largest power plant, Drax, had been assured by its senior executives that it was meeting environmental standards when it publicly denied allegations of cutting down forests to fuel its operations.
Senior executives at the North Yorkshire-based power station raised concerns internally about the validity of their sustainability claims while publicly denying allegations made in a BBC Panorama documentary. The documentary claimed that Drax had been burning wood sourced from "old-growth" forests in Canada.
Drax's CEO, Will Gardiner, was accused by former employee Rowaa Ahmar of trying to cover up concerns raised by staff about the lack of evidence supporting the company's claims.
A tribunal heard that Drax did not have sufficient data to prove the exact origin of its wood pellets, meaning it could not guarantee that its biomass was sustainable and legal under government requirements.
Gardiner denied this, stating that he had been advised by his head of corporate affairs that the documentary would "not have a significant impact or fallout" but that after the revelations the company called an emergency meeting as it faced questions both from within Drax and externally.
The UK's largest power plant, Drax, had been assured by its senior executives that it was meeting environmental standards when it publicly denied allegations of cutting down forests to fuel its operations.
Senior executives at the North Yorkshire-based power station raised concerns internally about the validity of their sustainability claims while publicly denying allegations made in a BBC Panorama documentary. The documentary claimed that Drax had been burning wood sourced from "old-growth" forests in Canada.
Drax's CEO, Will Gardiner, was accused by former employee Rowaa Ahmar of trying to cover up concerns raised by staff about the lack of evidence supporting the company's claims.
A tribunal heard that Drax did not have sufficient data to prove the exact origin of its wood pellets, meaning it could not guarantee that its biomass was sustainable and legal under government requirements.
Gardiner denied this, stating that he had been advised by his head of corporate affairs that the documentary would "not have a significant impact or fallout" but that after the revelations the company called an emergency meeting as it faced questions both from within Drax and externally.