Western Daily Press

Dredging off Portishead ‘low risk’

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DUMPING hundreds of thousands of tonnes of sediment from Hinkley Point into the

Bristol Channel at Portishead carries a “very low risk”, project leaders say.

Chris Fayers, the 3.2-gigawatt power station’s head of environmen­t, said the material had been tested more than other sediment along the British coastline and is safe for swimmers and marine life.

EDF Energy secured permission in August to dredge and dump material from near Hinkley Point C at a private disposal site off Portishead, despite objections from North Somerset Council and Portishead Town Council.

The operation is due to wrap up for the year in the coming weeks.

Mr Fayers told a question and answer session for residents that was webcast last week: “We’ve tested the sediment and it poses no risk to human health or the environmen­t. There’s internatio­nal best practice and guidance. We’ve gone beyond that in response to people’s genuine concerns. We’ve taken lots of samples. We haven’t just skimmed the surface, we’ve sampled all the way down.

“Dredging is not uncommon in the Severn Estuary. We’re consented for just shy of half a million tonnes of wet material. Over the last 20 years approximat­ely 40 million wet tonnes have been disposed of within the estuary.”

He added: “All that testing is in the public domain. They’re out there, we aren’t hiding anything. The results are consistent and haven’t shown anything unusual.”

EDF is dredging so it can place structures on the sea bed to cool the power station, which will power six million homes.

The Marine Management Organisati­on licence says the sediment has to remain in the special area of conservati­on near the Portbury Wharf salt marsh.

EDF has also applied to dump sediment at Cardiff Grounds after its previous licence lapsed in 2019.

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