• ‘No future for a Severn barrage’

    Severn barragePLANS for a £35 billion Severn barrage look effectively dead in the water.

    A group of MPs on an influential House of Commons select committee has concluded the case for a tidal barrage across the Severn estuary to generate electricity is as yet “unproven”.

    It cannot recommend the Hafren Power scheme, describing it as “no knight in shining armour for renewables”.

    There will be cheers from the Bristol Port company as the verdict should allow it to go ahead with plans for a deep container port that could create thousands of jobs.


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    The committee’s conclusion follows more than six months of gathering information and hearing from experts on the economic and environmental impacts of the scheme.

    In a report published today – A Severn Barrage? – MPs say that while the barrage could help tackle climate change, the Hafren Power scheme had failed to demonstrate economic, environmental and public acceptability.

    Hafren Power proposed an 11-mile fixed tidal barrage between Brean and Lavernock Point.

    Although construction of the barrage would be privately financed, Government support would be required for approximately 30 years.

    Tim Yeo MP, committee chairman, said: “We are not convinced that the economic case for the proposed barrage is strong enough.

    “The Hafren Power project in its current form has not demonstrated sufficient value as a low-carbon energy source to override local business and environmental concerns.”

    The report said that industry concerns – including from Bristol Port – had not been “fully addressed”, while the impact on jobs and growth “remains unclear”.

    Mr Yeo urged the Government to consider harnessing the river’s massive tidal range in a more sustainable and cost-effective way.

    It remains for the Government to make a final decision following the committee’s report which is published today.

    The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds and a host of other environmental groups have welcomed the findings.

    Bristol West MP Stephen Williams would like to see the Severn’s energy harnessed in a smaller-scale project.

    He said: “I am very keen for us to press ahead with tapping the clean energy potential of the Severn. We must do this without damaging the Port of Bristol or the ecology of the estuary itself. A huge barrage from Brean Down to Lavernock is therefore out of the question.

    “A smaller barrage, over the Shoots stones near the two bridges, would meet the bill, as would lagoons on the coast.

    “We need marine scientists and engineers to agree the best option and for Government to work with the power industry to get a scheme constructed.”

    Bristol North West MP Charlotte Leslie agreed and said the committee’s report seemed like a “common-sense conclusion”.

    She said: “I do not think anyone is against the concept of harnessing our natural energy – that is a no brainer – but the question is always is this amount of expenditure and cost to jobs worth it?

    “We definitely need to do something to harness the Severn and Bristol is a very green city. But like all these things it is easy to get starry eyed about a big icon of greenness. I am much more interested in what produces the best results.”

    Simon Bird, Bristol Port’s chief executive, said: “The select committee has read through and listened to masses of evidence and come to the only sensible conclusion that the Severn Barrage brings with it unprecedented problems.

    “The barrage has been killed off by MPs – again – because it is a bad idea.

    “Hafren Power’s PR machine has been formidable – but as eminent physicist Richard Feynman said: ‘For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations for nature cannot be fooled.’

    “Hafren Power presented a woefully-inadequate, misguided proposal and we are glad to see the back of it.”

    The port has long argued that the Severn Barrage would stifle future growth and therefore damage the chances of creating thousands of new jobs in the region.

    Mr Bird said the port has forged an alliance with other firms and bodies and the University of the West of England to find new ways of generating power from the Severn without “unacceptable damage to the environment and with real economic benefits”.

    Meanwhile the RSPB responded to the report with a call for a new view on the generation of renewable energy from the estuary.

    Peter Jones, a conservation officer with the RSPB, said: “We should now move on to consider seriously alternative ways of harnessing tidal energy without doing unacceptable harm to the habitats and wildlife that they support.”

    Martin Spray, chief executive of the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust, said it is time to stop wasting public money.

    Mark Lloyd, of the Angling Trust, said the decision would save 83 species of fish.

    Matthew Sinclair, chief executive of TaxPayers’ Alliance, said: “It is good news that the committee has rejected the latest proposal for an enormously-expensive Severn Barrage.

    “It would be a woeful deal for the country and a terrible burden on families already struggling with their energy bills.

    Neath MP Peter Hain, who resigned his front-bench position in order to campaign for the barrage, said the “ball was now firmly in the Government’s court”.

    He said: “The plans are in place and the £25 billion from private investors is on standby but will not be around forever.”

  • Fishing at Chew Valley Chris Hartley lands a monster as lake offers up good catches

    YORKSHIRE fly fisher, Chris Hartley hooked into this superbly conditioned rainbow trout while boat fishing at Chew Valley Lake’s Heron’s Green Bay.

    The monster fell for a size 14 Diawl Bach, which was part of a washing line set up fished on a Rio Midge Tip line. Hartley also included a 6-1-0 rainbow trout in his eight-fish limit catch.

    1. Chris Hartley lands monster Rainbow Trout

    Other big fish caught last week included a 9-2-0 rainbow trout by Chew regular Tony Gourlay, while Tony Ling weighed in an eight-fish limit catch consisting of four seven pounders, and four others weighing in the 5 to 6lb class.

    Chew Valley Lake catch returns show that 312 anglers caught 1,980 fish at an average weight of 2-14-0. At Blagdon, 241 rods killed 1,024 fish at an average weight of 2-11-0, while 61 Barrow Tank anglers caught 185 fish averaging 1-12-0.


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    The total catch to date from all waters is a massive 17,220 fish.

    Pete Bartlett and Mark Broomsgrove clinched victory in the overall and silverfish category, respectively, after knocking up a perfect set of 40 points in the Acorn Carp Fishery ‘Pole Only’ Series, fished at Kingston Seymour.

    The runner-up was Tom Thick, who beat Mike Nicholls on weight after both contestants finished the five-match series with an equal 37 points.

    Acorn Fishery was in top form for the final round, with the top three anglers all hitting the 100lb mark. Local rod Brian Slipper beat Pete Bartlett to the top spot by just 12oz.

    Slipper poled pellet both long and short off Bridge Peg 33 for 112-15-0 of mostly carp, while the new champ poled the same bait shallow at peg 9 for a similar 112-3-0.

    Result. Overall: 1, Brian Slipper (Sensas Thyers) 112-15-0, Bridge peg 33; 2, Pete Bartlett (Frampton RBL AC) 112-3-0, peg 9; 3, Lewis Jones (Sensas Thyers) 108-14-0, peg 23; 4, Tony Rixon (Mosella Avon Angling Bristol) 99-15-0, peg 1; 5= Tim Ford (Preston Innovations Thatchers) peg 8, and Tom Thick (Thatchers Tackle) peg 18, both 87-2-0. Silverfish: 1, Paul Faiers (Sensas Thyers) 39-4-0, peg A3. 2= Glen Calvert (Veals) peg 30, and Russ Peck (Somerset ) peg A8, both 21-4-0; 4, Dave Poole (Somerset) 17-10-0, peg A1.

    Final league. Overall: 1, Pete Bartlett (Frampton RBL AC) 40 points (Total weight 374-4-0); 2, Tom Thick (Thatchers Tackle) 37pts (Tw 358-0-1); 3, Mike Nichols (Silverfox) 37pts (Tw 264-8-0); 4, Lance Tucker (Sensas Thyers) 35pts, (Tw 226-13-0); 5, Tim Ford (Preston Innovations Thatchers) 34pts (Tw 277-9-0); 6, Lewis Jones (Sensas Thyers) 33pts, (Tw 365-14-0). Silverfish: 1, Mark Broomsgrove (Sensas Thyers) 40 points (Total weight 89-0-0); 2, John Bradford (Avon Angling Bristol) 39pts (Tw 59-2-0); 3, Paul Faiers (Sensas Thyers) 36pts (Tw 80-8-0); 4, Glenn Calvert (Veals) 36pts (Tw 71-12-0); 5, Chris Fox (Avon Angling Bristol) 35pts (50-13-0); 6, Kev Perry (Sensas Thyers) 34pts (Tw 35-3-0).

    Mike Chapman, pictured, scraped home by the weight of one fish to win the South West Disabled and Over-50s AC Sunday match, fished on Plantation Fishery’s Horseshoe Lake at Kingston Seymour.

    He poled paste and later luncheon meat into the lakeside margins of peg eight to tempt an 11-carp catch totalling 52-2-0.

    Charlie Barnes topped the silvers list with a 5-7-0 mixed bag taken from the lakeside margins of peg 13 with maggot.

    Result. Overall: 1, Mike Chapman 52-2-0, peg 8; 2, Colin Dyer 49-10-0, peg 7; 3, Andy Shields 30-13-0, peg 19; 4, Harry Muir 30-12-0, peg 12; 5, Bob Smith 30-10-0, peg 15; 6, Ray Bazeley 26-8-0, peg 22. Silverfish: 1, Charlie Barnes 5-7-0, peg 13.

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