Western Mail

Tidal lagoon with floating island is of interest – MP

- RICHARD YOULE Reporter richard.youle@walesonlin­e.co.uk

ATIDAL lagoon in Swansea Bay with floating houses and a floating solar farm is “of great interest,” a senior Conservati­ve MP has said.

David TC Davies, the under-Secretary of State for Wales, told a crossparty committee that he and the Secretary of State had met Swansea council representa­tives about the Dragon Energy Island proposal.

The council is keen to see the proposal taken forward, although there is no firm project on the table as yet. It would need planning permission and an operating permit, among other consents.

Monmouth MP Mr Davies made the comment during a Welsh Affairs Committee hearing about renewable energy and carbon emission targets.

He had been asked by Gower AM Tonia Antoniazzi about the previous Swansea Bay tidal lagoon project, which was not built because ministers felt it was too costly to back.

Mr Davies recalled that the developers of that project, under questionin­g from him and Labour MP Rachel Reeves, had said they were seeking a much higher level of subsidy than the figure that had previously been disclosed.

He also said he had concerns about the developers’ links to a quarry where the rock for the lagoon wall was going to come from.

“Both I and Rachel Reeves had very grave concerns, but that’s not to say the principle is wrong,” said Mr Davies.

“Both myself and the Secretary of State have met Swansea council to discuss the Dragon Energy Island scheme which, I think, is a very positive developmen­t – and I’m very confident in the abilities of the Labour council, who have some great people, and the scheme put forward is one of great interest.”

Earlier in the hearing, committee chairman Stephen Crabb put it to Mr Davies and Department of Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Minister Anne-Marie Trevelyan that the UK Government’s latest carbon emission targets would mean “massive changes” and job losses for Wales’ carboninte­nsive industries.

The UK Government wants to reduce carbon emissions by 78% by 2035, compared to 1990 levels, requiring changes to industry, the transport sector and how houses are heated.

“I mean, basically, a lot of those (industrial) jobs are going to go under the government’s plans, right?” asked Mr Crabb, MP for Presili Pembrokesh­ire.

Mr Davies replied: “Well, there certainly will be massive changes, but I think what we will see is not jobs going, but jobs changing as well.”

He cited floating offshore wind proposals off the coast of Pembrokesh­ire, the potential for steel production to become less carbon-intensive, and work happening at a site in Cwmbran to develop hydrogen-powered vehicles.

Mr Crabb asked the two government representa­tives if they were “absolutely confident” that plans were in place to deliver such a rapid, ambitious transition.

Mr Davies replied: “The plans are ambitious. They are achievable but there will certainly be consequenc­es.

“I think we have to accept that the public want us to be ambitious about cutting carbon emissions.”

He added: “But I don’t accept that that’s going to lead to job losses.

“I think there’s going to be job changes.”

 ??  ?? > How the floating island of up to 10,000 homes in Swansea Bay could look
> How the floating island of up to 10,000 homes in Swansea Bay could look

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