The
proposed 320 MW, $1.2 billion Swansea Bay Tidal Lagoon project is now one step
closer to becoming a reality — developer Tidal Lagoon Power Ltd has now
submitted the application for the first phase to the proper development
authorities. The project, if approved, will be located off the coast of South
Wales and will cover an area of over six miles.
Current
plans are for construction to begin in 2015, and for the project to be online
by 2018. If Swansea is approved, then it will be followed by four more projects
in various lagoons, according to Tidal Lagoon Power — all of which would be
completed by 2023, and together (7,300 MW of capacity) provide up to 10% of the
UK’s domestic electricity needs.
Given the rejection of the somewhat similar Severn Barrage
tidal project just last year, it’ll be interesting to see what happens. That
said, nearly the only thing that these two projects have in common is the
exploitation of tidal energy — all of the specifics are quite different. In
particular, most criticism of the Severn Barrage project came down to the fact
that barrages have a significant effect on the environment, whereas tidal
lagoons are much less intrusive.
Renewable
Energy World explains:
Though the project is still waiting on the environmental
go-ahead, experts state that tidal lagoon projects have much less environmental
considerations than the heavily criticized Severn Barrage proposal. The 11-mile
barrage would have spanned the length of the bay. Barrages allow high tide to
flow in, but hold water back until the opportune moment to capture energy as
the water recedes. Tidal lagoons take up 40 percent less space than a barrage
and allows water currents to flow around the project.
Tidal lagoons are created by building a ring-shaped
“sand-core breakwater or rock bund,” which resembles a harbor wall, typically constructed
from mainly sand and rock. Turbines mounted in concrete casing are submerged
and lined within the wall. When the tide moves in and out, the wall holds water
back, and once it reaches a certain level, gates are opened and the water flows
through the turbines, which creates electricity.
“This technology will have less impact on fish and other
wildlife than the barrage proposals, which conservationists have spent several
years fighting in the estuary, and which the government has repeatedly rejected,”
stated Sean Christian, special sites spokesman for the bird and wildlife lobby
RSPB. “However, it could still have major impacts on the estuary and its
wildlife, and we will need to look at the details of each lagoon proposal
closely.”
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