This case study presents a coastal engineering scheme that addressed a unique environmental challenge on a marine construction site. Artificially bunded reservoirs were constructed on the rocky shore of the Bristol Channel, UK, to mitigate the potential impact to ecological features of the Severn Estuary/Môr Hafren Special Area of Conservation resulting from the construction of a jetty at the Hinkley Point C construction site. The installation of piles irreversibly altered the natural supply of seawater from several large rock pools to Corallina officinalis (red seaweed) waterfalls, that the developer, Electricité de France, was obliged to protect. Corallina can die within 30 min of drying out. Following rigorous topographic surveys of the foreshore, hydrodynamic modelling and an evolution of protective measures, concrete structures were designed and installed to ensure the Corallina waterfalls were passively supplied with a constant flow of seawater throughout the tidal cycle. The artificial bunds had to be sympathetic to the natural environment while sufficiently durable to withstand the high-energy conditions of the intertidal site. A local wave buoy 13.5-year dataset shows that the scheme has withstood the two highest wave heights recorded, one of which was the third highest storm peak.
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October 2024
Research Article|
December 04 2024
Protecting a Severn Estuary intertidal habitat affected by jetty construction Available to Purchase
Kevin E. O’Connell;
Kevin E. O’Connell
Associate Director, Marine Consenting and Environment, Tetra Tech RPS Energy, Chepstow, UK; Seconded to: Health, Safety and Environment, NNB Generation Company (HPC) Limited, London, UK (corresponding author: kevin.oconnell@tetratech.com)
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Tony Dolphin;
Tony Dolphin
Principal Scientist (Coastal Geomorphology), Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science (Cefas), Lowestoft, UK; Honorary Lecturer, School of Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK
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Adam J. H. Crowther, BSc, MSc;
Adam J. H. Crowther, BSc, MSc
Senior Marine Consultant, Marine Consenting and Environment, Tetra Tech RPS Energy, Chepstow, UK
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Ralph Brayne;
Ralph Brayne
Senior Coastal Processes Scientist, Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science (Cefas), Lowestoft, UK
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Stephen D. Roast
Stephen D. Roast
Marine Environment Manager, Environment, Decommissioning & Radiation Safety, Sizewell C Limited, London, UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
May 25 2024
Accepted:
October 04 2024
Online ISSN: 1751-7737
Print ISSN: 1741-7597
Emerald Publishing Limited: All rights reserved
2024
Maritime Engineering (2024) 177 (3-4): 137–147.
Article history
Received:
May 25 2024
Accepted:
October 04 2024
Citation
O’Connell KE, Dolphin T, Crowther AJH, Brayne R, Roast SD (2024), "Protecting a Severn Estuary intertidal habitat affected by jetty construction". Maritime Engineering, Vol. 177 No. 3-4 pp. 137–147, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/jmaen.24.00015
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