Time-critical conservation work to prevent the collapse of a national park’s leading cultural heritage landmark has stalled despite the Government agreeing to bankroll the £1.5m needed for the project.
Talks are ongoing between the North York Moors National Park Authority, Rosedale Commoners and the Rural Payments Agency over how to deliver the funding to shore up the arches of the colossal Victorian Rosedale East iron kilns.
The talks come several years after the authority identified during a National Lottery-funded project that the ironstone kilns, which helped helped to make Teesside the centre of the international iron market in the late 19th Century, were at imminent risk of failure due to weathering.
The monumental kilns, which can be seen for miles around in Rosedale, were built to refine ironstone ore to cut transport costs to Durham and later Teesside, where it would be smelted into iron, and closed with the General Strike in 1926.
By then, about 11 million tonnes of ironstone had from the valley had been used in construction projects around the world.
A meeting of the park authority today will hear a Countryside Stewardship agreement granting funds of £1.46m for the conservation of the kilns had been offered by the Rural Payments Agency to the Rosedale Commoners, who include two tenant farmers.
The agency has stipulated that the agri-environment money the farmers receive for maintaining the moorland ecosystem cannot be separated from the proposed conservation work on the kilns.
As the agency is providing taxpayers’ money, its officers say the grant will only be given if all the costs are paid for up front and then a single claim is made by the commoners.
Jonathan Murray, who has served as the treasurer of the Yorkshire Federation of Commoners, said due to the cost of the conservation works the Government funding to make upland sheep farming across the 300-hectare common more viable while improving vegetation quality was out of reach.
Due to the cashflow impasse the agency is considering whether it can accept staged payments for what is believed to be a 16-month project.
Mr Murray said: “The financial ties are preventing it from going ahead.
“The losers as it stands are both the estate and the farmers as they can’t get the agri-environment agreement back into play.”
Referring to the agency’s offer of funding, a report to the park authority meeting on Tuesday states: “Whilst in theory this is excellent news for the conservation project… in practice the conservation project is almost certainly not currently deliverable.
“The authority is working with the Rosedale Commoners to investigate whether a loan from a third party to the Commoners could help to provide the up-front financing required for the project, although this is potentially challenging with the amount of funding required.”
The park authority has about £100,000 it would contribute towards the conservation project.
An authority spokeswoman said some of the arches were “at imminent risk of collapse”, but there was optimism that it could intervene before “losing the integrity of the entire structure, meaning it would irretrievably lost as a feature of the landscape”.
Referring to the conservation funding, she added: “At the moment it’s not looking very practical. We are in conversation with the Rural Payments Agency and the pragmatic solution is staged payments.”
The Rural Payments Agency said it would not comment on individual cases.
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