Anwen
Well-Known Member
It's not just the birds. Early studies on fish mortality rates through turbines show a >95% kill rate. This means that the genetically distinct salmonid species in the Wye and the Severn would be extinct in a couple of years. The salmon fisheries are worth around 10 million a year, which is small compared to the cost of the barrage, but will have a big impact on the people who derive their living from the rivers.
If the prof you heard a talk from is the civil engineering guy from Swansea or Cardiff, then you ahould know that he has a vested interest in the barrage going ahead.
One of the more interesting proposals is the impoundment approach. Depending on where these are sited, they can provide flood defence as well as energy, and would allow flow of commercial shipping and migratory fish. The impoundments outlined in the recent news wouldn't do much for flood defence though.
If the prof you heard a talk from is the civil engineering guy from Swansea or Cardiff, then you ahould know that he has a vested interest in the barrage going ahead.
One of the more interesting proposals is the impoundment approach. Depending on where these are sited, they can provide flood defence as well as energy, and would allow flow of commercial shipping and migratory fish. The impoundments outlined in the recent news wouldn't do much for flood defence though.