Concerto
Well-Known Member
Comments are sought about the impact of this project as reported by the Medway and Swale Boating Association.
http://msba.org.uk/?p=5493
http://msba.org.uk/?p=5493
The attachment that shows the route across the estuary isn't very clear, but it looks as though the route heads out to near the Red Sands Towers, North of the Kentish Flats Wind Farm before dipping South of Pan Sands towards deeper water in the Queens Channel and crossing the London Array cables somewhere near the Brit N, N Cardinal buoy. I cut across that spit en route to Gravelines on my final trip of the season at the end of October. Probably the most worrying bit is a dog leg in the cable on the edge of Grain Spit just North of Garison Point. I guess that is the crossing over the BritNed cable. That could have quite a significant impact to those of us that sail in to the Medway tacking into a SW breeze.Well a couple of things to watch out for based on previous similar works...
One is that if they are crossing the existing windfarm export cables, that needs to happen in the same zone that's already been created, and buoyed, north of Herne Bay. When that first rock berm was laid, its significance wasn't realised by anyone, including I believe Trinity House, until the operators suddenly published an NtM detailing the new depth of a few inches that was left over it.
The other is that by default the operators may well seek to close the Medway for days on end when they lay the cable. The original closures that the builders of Kentish Flats asked for along the Kent coast were ridiculous and totally over the top. London Array did the same in the East Swale, tried to close it altogether for a long period. In both cases, when met with howls of protest the requirements were reduced to a reasonable exclusion zone around the cable-laying vessel.
Vigilance needed!
The attachment that shows the route across the estuary isn't very clear, but it looks as though the route heads out to near the Red Sands Towers, North of the Kentish Flats Wind Farm before dipping South of Pan Sands towards deeper water in the Queens Channel and crossing the London Array cables somewhere near the Brit N, N Cardinal buoy. I cut across that spit en route to Gravelines on my final trip of the season at the end of October. Probably the most worrying bit is a dog leg in the cable on the edge of Grain Spit just North of Garison Point. I guess that is the crossing over the BritNed cable. That could have quite a significant impact to those of us that sail in to the Medway tacking into a SW breeze.