Breast cancer in men is rare with just 400 new cases in the UK each year, compared to around 55,000 new cases in women.
Plans to build an anaerobic digestion facility near Grantham are being recommended for approval at a meeting next week.Ironstone Energy applied for planning permission to build the facility on farmland on the Lincolnshire/Leicestershire border, just outside the village of Sewstern.
The company said the facility would convert about 130,000 tonnes of purpose-grown crops into biomethane, generating enough energy to supply gas for about 18,000 homes annually.More than 1,000 people had signed a petition against the plans, citing concerns about lorries and the visual impact on the countryside.The application stated that the site was chosen because of its proximity to an existing high-pressure gas grid network.
The plant's location was also considered to be near farms that could provide purpose-grown crops.It would employ six full-time staff.
when they were announced, with concerns being raised over road safety and a call for the plant to be built on industrial land instead.
There is also the risk of the plant causing odour emissions, according to the"There's a lot of things that are better up here than they were down there," he said.
"I think the health service is better up here, you get better looked after."Teenagers Samuel, 18, and Liam, 16, said they had been given little opportunity to learn about devolution or Welsh politics.
"I don't know much about it to be honest, not much at all," said Samuel."We didn't learn anything about that in school. The most we learn is about the general election."