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- Severn Estuary feasibility study to include tidal lagoons
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- A seasonal flurry of good news for the environment
- Anglesey tidal scheme welcomed by green campaigners
- Approval of major windfarm welcomed
- Assembly makes the right decision for A40
- Cautious welcome for Minister’s waste strategy for Wales
- Climate change and energy bills get royal assent
- Climate threat dwarfs environmental gains in 2008
- Coal must clean up its act
- Welsh Lib Dems urged to back lagoons ahead of the Barrage
- Energy route map moves in right direction
- Welsh political party leaders told to resist rush for coal
- Opencast protests ‘inevitable’
- UK Government failing Welsh households on fuel poverty
- Minister urged to act on "wasteful and damaging" power station proposal
- New figures show Wales is failing on climate challenge
- New motorway would be ‘unnecessary and unaffordable’
- New research shows we must act now to reduce greenhouse gas emissions
- No need for nuclear
- Opencast mine buffer zone proposal welcomed
- Heads of the Valleys Low Carbon Zone is ‘win-win policy’
- Radical cuts needed to curb climate change
- Royal Welsh Show visitors support vision of Wales as a leader in green energy
- Scrapping of super-highway a welcomed step towards sustainable transport
- Severn Estuary feasibility study to include tidal lagoons
- Tesco backs high-speed power boat race through wildlife haven
- Wales in the dark about biofuels in petrol
- Wider range of options for harnessing Severn tidal power welcomed
- Wind power myths blown away
- Windfarm to produce a tenth of Wales’ electricity should go ahead
- World’s first climate change law is a victory for people power
Severn Estuary feasibility study to include tidal lagoons
The inclusion of tidal lagoons in a feasibility study into tidal power in the Severn Estuary, announced today by the Welsh Assembly Government, has been welcomed by Friends of the Earth Cymru.
In October last year the environment group had condemned the UK Government's Sustainable Development Commission recommendation that the study look only at a possible Severn barrage, and ignore the great potential of tidal lagoons and other technologies.
Neil Crumpton, Energy Campaigner for Friends of the Earth Cymru and author of the group's damning Severn Barrage Report, said:
"We welcome the study as it'll now include consideration of offshore lagoon schemes. A barrage would be enormously environmentally damaging and hugely expensive. Yet tidal lagoons may be able to produce the same amount of energy at half the cost, without seriously damaging an internationally important wildlife site.
"The estuary's legal protection means the government will have to offer a very convincing case that the £15 billion a barrage would cost could not be better spent in alternative energy investments."
Contact details:
Friends of the Earth Cymru
33 Castle Arcade Balcony
CARDIFF
CF10 1BY



