Severn Barrage, UK—environmental reappraisal
More details?
Sustainability has become one of the expected competencies for the civil engineer. Embedding sustainability into practice constitutes a burden of responsibility, yet an opportunity to provide leadership. It is one of those subjects that we cannot afford to ignore.
ICE Proceedings: Engineering Sustainability provides a forum for sharing the latest thinking from research and practice, and increasingly is presenting the 'how to' of engineering a resilient future.
It features refereed papers and shorter articles relating to the pursuit and implementation of sustainability principles through engineering planning, design and application. The tensions between and integration of social, economic and environmental considerations within such schemes are of particular relevance. Methodologies for assessing sustainability, policy issues, education and corporate responsibility will also be included.
The aims will be met primarily by providing papers and briefing notes (including case histories and best practice guidance) of use to decision-makers, practitioners, researchers and students.
- Editorial Advisory Panel
- Submit a paper online
- Publish with Us
More like this?
- In this publication
- In this subject:
Construction Materials,
Waste Management,
Structures and Buildings,
Municipal, Community, Urban & Rural,
Water and Wastewater,
Sitework,
Energy,
Environment,
Civil Engineering Industry
- By this author:
R. Kirby
,
T. L. Shaw
The biological and chemical regimes of the Severn Estuary are severely stressed by its physical regime. Estuarine flora and fauna naturally adapt to habitat conditions. The Severn is dynamic and turbid to such a degree, however, as to put it beyond the tolerance of most species. The foreshores have an exceptionally low carrying capacity for shorebirds and provide poor feeding and nursery areas for fish. Parts of the subtidal bed regime are barren and few support any live organisms. The turbid water excludes sunlight and suppresses dissolved oxygen. The ecosystem is limited to the most hardy and immature estuarine organisms and these are only present as a result of continual recruitment from the Bristol Channel. Furthermore, combined sea level rise, increased storminess and foreshore erosion are sustaining the downward spiral in ecosystem biodiversity. This severe suppression is natural; it is not induced by anthropogenic contaminants. Should a tidal power barrage be built, mean water level and shelter would increase and current strengths diminish. Large-scale reductions in suspended load and greater bed stability would encourage colonisation. Mixed substrates would develop, leading to biodiverse and abundant invertebrate and vertebrate communities. It is unusual for a major engineering project to result in the large-scale invasion of a suppressed ecosystem by organisms; this is an inevitable consequence of this project.
- Keywords:
environment;
barrages & reservoirs;
dams
- Document Type: Research Article
- DOI: 10.1680/ensu.2005.158.1.31
- Affiliations:
1: Ravensrodd Consultants Taunton, UK;
2: Shawater Bath, UK
Share this article with others:
These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.