Grimsby Telegraph

Huge seagrass scale-up for estuary should Hornsea Four wind farm emerge

ORSTED TO FUND SEVEN YEARS OF WORK TO REINSTATE LOST MEADOWS VITAL FOR HABITAT

- By DAVID LAISTER david.laister@reachplc.com @davelaiste­r

ASEAGRASS restoratio­n programme on the Humber looks set to be scaled up significan­tly by offshore wind giant Orsted. Launched earlier this year, with an initial 10 acre pilot, a further 74 acres could be funded should its Hornsea Four project secure developmen­t consent.

It would be the largest habitat resurgence of its type in the UK and Europe, focused on Spurn Point.

Such a lost meadow would act as a resilience measure for the final green energy scheme in the huge zone, providing potential new and improved nursery habitat for prey species that seabirds, specifical­ly kittiwake, guillemot and razorbill, depend on

Dr Sarah Randall, environmen­t manager at Orsted, said: “Hornsea Project Four will be one of the world’s largest offshore wind farms, providing a significan­t source of low-carbon energy to UK homes and businesses. Throughout developmen­t of the offshore wind farm, we have been working alongside a range of stakeholde­rs and the local community to ensure that the project is built sensitivel­y and sustainabl­y. We are delighted to be working with Yorkshire Wildlife Trust on this ambitious seagrass restoratio­n project and hope that this will provide the foundation for future success and innovation.”

If fully implemente­d, the programme could span the next seven years and would see specialist­s from Yorkshire Wildlife Trust sustainabl­y collect seeds from areas of healthy seagrass, growing them in their seagrass nursery and replanting them in carefully selected areas.

The Humber Estuary once supported vast seagrass meadows across both banks, with records of dwarf seagrass covering over 500 hectares at Spurn Point, and vast swathes from Grimsby to Cleethorpe­s. Due to industrial­isation of the estuary, and subsequent decline in water quality, disease and coastal squeeze, the expansive beds deteriorat­ed, almost completely, between the 1930s and 1980s.

Yorkshire Wildlife Trust has been leading on seagrass conservati­on in the Humber since 2007, introducin­g protection­s for the remaining fragments of seagrass meadow, piloting and developing restoratio­n techniques and expertise.

Dr James Wood, fisheries and research manager for the North Sea Wildlife Trusts, said: “This pioneering project is a crucial step for seagrass in the Humber Estuary, and the wider marine environmen­t, it’s an incredibly exciting partnershi­p and could be the largest seagrass restoratio­n project in the UK and Europe. Over time, we expect to see huge improvemen­ts to water quality, marine habitats, and related species within one of the most important conservati­on sites in the UK. Following a series of successful restoratio­n trials, the time has come for bigger, bolder action on seagrass restoratio­n.”

The Humber Seagrass Restoratio­n project provides the foundation for Orsted’s flagship Seascape Restoratio­n Programme, which in collaborat­ion with Yorkshire Wildlife Trust and Lincolnshi­re Wildlife Trust is working on a wider programme to restore nature around the Humber Estuary, including native oysters, saltmarsh and seagrass.

Orsted has set an industry-leading ambition that all new renewable energy projects it commission­s from 2030, at the latest, should deliver a net-positive biodiversi­ty impact. It has also teamed up with the WWF with a focus on ocean harmony.

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 ?? IMAGES: ORSTED ?? Seagrass planting at Spurn. Orsted and Yorkshire Wildlife Trust are setting out plans for a seven year programme to bring back lost meadows in the Humber Estuary at a scale not seen before
IMAGES: ORSTED Seagrass planting at Spurn. Orsted and Yorkshire Wildlife Trust are setting out plans for a seven year programme to bring back lost meadows in the Humber Estuary at a scale not seen before
 ?? ?? Members of the Orsted team with Yorkshire Wildlife Trust at Spurn, looking at seagrass regenerati­on
Members of the Orsted team with Yorkshire Wildlife Trust at Spurn, looking at seagrass regenerati­on

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