South Wales Evening Post

Blue Eden ‘benefits for supply chain businesses’

- ROBERT LLOYD Print Content Editor robert.lloyd01@walesonlin­e.co.uk

SWANSEA’S £1.7bn Blue Eden project will have major benefits for local supply chain businesses and the city’s shops, restaurant­s, hotels and pubs.

That’s the view of Alan Brayley, Managing Director of AB Glass and President of the Swansea Bay Business Club, and Russell Greenslade, Chief Executive of the Swansea Business Improvemen­t District.

The Blue Eden project is being led by Bridgend-based DST Innovation­s and their business partners, with support from Swansea Council and Associated British Ports. It includes a 9.5km tidal lagoon structure, a floating solar farm, a data centre, a hightech battery manufactur­ing plant, a battery storage facility and many other features that will help place Swansea at the global forefront of renewable energy innovation.

Blue Eden will create over 2,500 permanent jobs and support a further 16,000 jobs across Wales and the UK,

while creating additional jobs during its constructi­on. The project – being funded by the private sector - will be sited along an extensive area of land and water, to the south of the Prince of Wales Dock in the SA1 area.

Russell Greenslade said: “As well as the jobs in Blue Eden facilities like the data centre and manufactur­ing plant, the scheme will also generate thousands of constructi­on jobs while it’s built. As we’ve seen with the constructi­on

of the Copr Bay phase one district including the arena, this will have major benefits for local businesses because these workers will be spending money in the city’s shops, hotels, restaurant­s and pubs.

“The Blue Eden announceme­nt is yet another major private sector vote of confidence in Swansea and our city’s businesses and people.”

Alan Brayley said: “Swansea and South West Wales as a whole has hundreds if not thousands of supply chain businesses that can hugely benefit from a project of Blue Eden’s magnitude. This will be another major boost to the local and regional economies, building on all the regenerati­on work already taking place that will ensure Swansea quickly recovers from the impact of the pandemic.

“Blue Eden will further raise Swansea’s profile not just across the UK but across the world as a whole as a city to invest in, which will in turn translate into even more jobs and opportunit­ies for local people.”

The energy generated by the lagoon and solar farm will be used on site, but there is also scope for 32% of it to be exported onto the grid for the benefit of local residents and businesses. The amount of green energy consumed by the Blue Eden developmen­t will also save a significan­t amount of energy being taken from the grid in future. The project would be delivered in three phases over 12 years. Subject to planning consent, Blue Eden work on site could start by early 2023.

 ?? ?? Russell Greenslade
Russell Greenslade
 ?? ?? Alan Brayley
Alan Brayley

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