North Somerset Council is set to urge the government to block “crazy” plans to flood hundreds of acres of farmland near Kingston Seymour.
Power company EDF wants to turn a huge swath of farmland by the village into a salt marsh to make up for fish killed at Hinkley Point C. But councillors are calling for EDF to drop the plan and instead invest in biodiversity in ways the area wants and needs.
“It is crazy, chairman, to destroy habitat to mitigate for killing fish,” Peter Burden, Conservative Portishead South, told a full council meeting November 12.
Burden tabled a motion, amended by Annemieke Waite (Winford, Green), for the council to urge the government to insist that EDF obey the original planning conditions. Councillors voted to pass the resolution unanimously.
Steve Bridger (Yatton, Independent), a local councillor for the village on North Somerset Council, described the EDF plan as “ham-fisted.”
“Landowners who would be directly impacted by the proposals were sent letters in September, completely out of the blue, with a rather threatening tone talking about compulsory purchase of their land,” Bridger said. “The proposals will not just have an impact on agricultural land, livelihoods, and biodiversity but also on a thriving network of other small businesses that have relatively recently been created within the footprint of the proposed saltmarsh.”
Farmers and businesses dismayed
Farmers and local businesses have expressed dismay at the plans. Third generation young farmer Sophie Cole, whose entire farm could be affected, said in September: “No amount of money can compensate me for the loss of my livelihood and exciting plans for the future.”
When Somerset’s new nuclear power station was granted planning permission, it was told to install speakers to scare off fish from getting sucked into its cooling systems. But EDF now says this would be “dangerous to install,” and wants to compensate for the 44 tonnes of fish expected to die each year by creating 340 hectares of saltmarsh along the Severn.
Mr Bridger said: “The salt marsh proposals have been escalated with our MPs and have already been debated in Parliament," Cllr Bridger said. “I am of the view, and I think that this is shared by councillor Burden, that EDF should instead be asked to fund all sorts of biodiversity gains in North Somerset that we actually want and need.”
The salt marsh plan involves not maintaining the sea wall, and building new sea defences further inland which EDF have insisted would be “bulletproof.” Mr Burden said any changes to sea defences should be dealt with in the same way as other shoreline changes.
“I think we should ask for serious amounts of cash to be put into proper nature conservation and environment improvements in the wider area, not set up a completely new scheme by an organisation that’s interested in making power,” he said.
Involving central government
The council resolution sees it commit to continue working with the Environment Agency and local communities to develop a strategy to protect residents and the natural habitat, and to write to Angela Rayner and Ed Miliband, as the secretaries of state responsible for local government and energy, to urge them to enforce the original planning conditions on EDF, and not let them swap them for creating salt marshes.
EDF has said previously that the salt marshes provide breeding grounds for fish, as well as food and shelter for other animals, and said the salt marsh could help prevent flooding. A public consultation will be held on any plans before they go ahead. EDF bosses met concerned locals in a public meeting in Kingston Seymour in October.
A salt marsh was first proposed at Pawlett Hams near Bridgwater but, after major local opposition, the plan was dropped and EDF began looking at locations further from the power station to locate salt marshes. Arlingham and, across the river, Rodley in Gloucestershire and Littleton-upon-Severn in South Gloucestershire were all proposed as locations.
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