Entrepreneur, Mark Shorrock, says scheme could power 107,000 homes and generate 250MW of renewable energy
The
Swansea Bay lagoon scheme will be the first of its kind in the UK.
A project
to power 107,000 homes using a tidal lagoon in Swansea Bay is seeking £10m of funding
from the public.
The first
of its kind in the UK, the scheme intends to generate up to 250MW of renewable
power by harnessing the tides to drive enormous turbines, enough to meet
Swansea's annual domestic electricity needs.
Tidal Lagoon, a company backed by
entrepreneur Mark Shorrock, who previously developed windfarms in Scotland and
solar arrays in Cornwall and Spain, wants to start construction in Swansea in
2017.
Shorrock
said tidal lagoons could eventually provide 10% of the UK's energy, and the company has already carried out initial
investigations into a second project in Cardiff Bay.
Nearly
seven miles of breakwaters need to be built to create a lagoon which will capture
water at high tide. Once the sea begins to flow the other way, release gates
will funnel water through turbines set in the lagoon wall.
Tidal
Lagoon is offering small-scale investors a 55% stake in the company to fund it
through the planning stage. About 10,000 shares worth £800 each will be issued,
with the offer expected to close by 7 June.
Half of
those shares will be offered under the government's enterprise investment
scheme, which offers tax relief to those buying shares in smaller, higher-risk
companies.
"We
are keen to attract investment from ordinary individual shareholders who like
the idea of shifting the energy mix to a low-carbon, benign format,"
Shorrock said.
He is
confident of securing major funding from pension funds and the government's green investment bank once Tidal Power has secured
planning permission in Swansea. But he says: "Where we struggle to get
government, pension funds or energy investors is this stage. It is the good
people of the UK that will really help the project take wing. Everyday people
are more ballsy and happy to take risks on something they believe in."
The
technology is not new – a 240MW system has
been in operation in La Rance, France, for nearly 50 years and a 254MW project was recently
launched at Sihwa lake in Korea – but similar projects planned in the UK have
been delayed because of the relatively high costs of building the lagoons.
Such
tidal projects have also been lumped in with the unpopular Severn Barrage plan,
which has yet to get off the ground partly owing to worries over the
environmental impact of blocking a major estuary.
Shorrock
insists the Swansea project is environmentally friendly because it does not
stop the sea flowing in and out, and does not harm seabirds. Friends of the
Earth supports the technology, saying it could produce "clean and effortless
energy".
Shorrock
has used profits from previous enterprises, as well as investment from unnamed
wealthy individuals, to fund three years of development on the tidal lagoon
including environmental surveys, local consultation and design.
The
Swansea project must now put together a set of detailed designs before seeking
approval from the government, which oversees significant infrastructure
developments. Shorrock claims the project has local backing and will create up
to 4,500 jobs, including those related to building the breakwater and the
turbines, as well as managing it as a tourist attraction and leisure facility
in the future.
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