There have been numerous proposed projects over the years, initially to provide a safe harbour and more recently to generate electricity.
Early projects In 1849
Thomas Fulljames, a civil engineer and the county surveyor for
Gloucestershire proposed a barrage from
Beachley to
Aust (now the site of the first
Severn Bridge), a span of just over . Since this was before commercial electricity production, the first proposals were based on the desire for a large shipping harbour in the Severn Estuary, road and railway transport, and flood protection. Magazine 1921 No action was taken on Fulljames's proposals and three quarters of a century later, in 1925, an official study group was commissioned. An awareness of the large
tidal range of 14 metres (46 ft), second only to
Bay of Fundy in
Eastern Canada, led to a proposal to generate 800
Megawatt (MW) of electricity at
English Stones and although considered technically possible, it was prevented on economic grounds (then costing £25 million). The viability was tested a few years later in 1931 when Paul Shishkoff, a
Russian immigrant, demonstrated a prototype tidal generator at
Avonmouth. It included a novel mechanism for spreading the power output over 24 hours. The full barrage was estimated at £5 million at the time. In 1933 the Severn Barrage Committee Report (HMSO) from a committee chaired by
Lord Brabazon recommended that an 800 MW barrage across the English Stones area would be the best option. The work was interrupted by
World War II and then revived in 1945 when engineers predicted an output of 2.2 terawatt hours (
TWh) per year. A further government study looked at barrage options in 1948 and estimated the construction costs at £60 million. In 1975 the Central Electricity Generating Board (
CEGB), published a study with evidence from
Bristol and
Salford universities for the Secretary of State's Advisory Council on Research and Development for Fuel and Power. Despite the ongoing
oil crisis, the council established that a barrage could not be economically viable unless the energy situation deteriorated significantly.
Bondi Committee, 1981 After just such a deterioration (due to the
Iranian Revolution and
1979 energy crisis) the plans were reinvestigated by the
Severn Barrage Committee in 1981. This committee was known as the "Bondi Committee" (after Professor Sir
Hermann Bondi). The committee investigated 6 possible barrage locations, from English Stones at the top of the estuary, down to a location largely at sea in the Bristol Channel between
Lynmouth in North Devon and
Porthcawl in South Wales. It produced a major energy paper, which recommended a long barrage of concrete powerhouse between Brean Down and Lavernock Point, sluice and plain caissons together with sand and rock-fill embankments. It would have generated 7,200 MW on the flow of the tides (the largest barrage considered could have produced double that power output). This set of plans was strongly built on a few years later by the Severn Tidal Power Group. In 1984
George Wimpey Atkins proposed a smaller barrage at
English Stones, in the hope of creating a smaller more economically viable project that would avoid the environmental impact of a large barrage.
Hooker or Shoots Barrage, 1987 This Wimpey Atkins 1984 study was criticised because it did not tackle the issue of
silting and in 1987
Arthur Hooker OBE (a former partner of
WS Atkins) in conjunction with
Parsons Brinckerhoff prepared a revised barrage proposed at English Stones to better tackle this issue. Parsons Brinckerhoff further updated their earlier proposal in 2006 and current estimates for this barrage (now known as the "Shoots Barrage") would cost £1.4 to £1.8 billion to build, and generate 2.75 TWh of power per year. At the highest tidal range, it would develop a peak output of 1,050 MW, and 313 MW output on average throughout the year. The barrage would be located just below the
Second Severn Crossing—i.e. above
Cardiff and
Bristol on the estuary—and so much smaller locks would be needed for upstream access to
Sharpness and
Gloucester docks as the large ports of
Portbury and Avonmouth would be unaffected. Like the STPG proposal, Hooker generates only on the ebb tide. Construction time would be four years. It would be built of rock fill embankment at the coastal sides (more like the proposals for "Tidal Lagoons"), but like the STPG would be sluice caissons and turbines with powerhouse in the middle section. In April 2009 the
Liberal Democrats produced a report called "A Tidal Solution—The Way Forward" that backed the Shoots Barrage along with a number of additional measures for power generation in the Severn Estuary. In September 2009 the report was adopted by the Lib Dem party conference as official party policy.
Severn Tidal Power Group, 1989 The £4.2 million study by Severn Tidal Power Group (STPG) built on the work of the Severn Barrage Committee, but also examined other possible barrages, and produced another major energy paper. Its members comprised
Sir Robert McAlpine,
Balfour Beatty,
Taylor Woodrow and
Alstom. They concluded that the 1981 plans were the best location for a barrage, but calculated that the power output could be larger, at 8,640 MW during flow, or 2,000 MW average power. This would provide 17 TWh of power per year (about 6% of UK consumption), equivalent to about 18 million tons of coal or 3
nuclear reactors. The cost in 1989 was calculated to be about £8 billion (£12 billion in 2006 money—about the same as six nuclear reactors, but different lifespan), and running costs would be £70 million per year (about the same as 1.5 nuclear reactors). The barrage would use existing technology as used in the
Rance tidal barrage in France, the
Annapolis Royal Generating Station in Canada and the Netherlands sea barrages. Power would be most efficiently generated only in the flow direction, and this effect on tidal range would mean that the tidal extent would be halved by losing the low tide rather than the high tide. That is, that the tide would only go out as far as the current tidal midpoint, but high tides would be unaffected (unless the barrage was deliberately closed to prevent flooding). The barrage would contain 216
turbines each generating 40 MW for the 8,640 MW total. Arrays of
sluices would let the
tide in and then close to force it out through the turbines after the tide has gone out some distance outside the barrage. This deliberate building of a
head on the water builds pressure that makes the turbines more efficient. This is a novel structure which aims to overcome the environmental side-effects of a barrage, and can be conceptualised as being half-way between a barrage and a tidal "fence" (a linked string of tidal-stream turbines). The designer, Rupert Evans, had previously worked on a tidal fence proposal, but since dismissed it as unworkable. The reef reduces environmental impact by working with a much smaller "head" of water—just —thereby reducing the impact of the structure on the estuary water and flow. The smaller head means that the water velocity is much lower and more lower power turbines are required. The load factor will be higher, partly because of the generation being both ebb and flow and the total energy output should (according to a recent report by W.S. Atkins commissioned by the
RSPB) be significantly greater than for the Cardiff-Weston Barrage, and is in part a result of siting the structure at the "outer" Minehead to Aberthaw line, which roughly doubles the volume of tidal water available.
Sustainable Development Commission, 2007 On 1 October 2007, the UK's
Sustainable Development Commission (SDC) published a report looking at the potential of
tidal power in the UK, including proposals for a Severn barrage. The report draws on a series of five evidence-based reports, one of which summarises all the available evidence from previous studies on a number of Severn barrage options, but focusing on the Cardiff-Weston and the Shoots schemes. The SDC also commissioned a programme of public and stakeholder engagement, which included a national opinion poll and a series of local and regional workshops. The SDC gave its support to the building of a Severn barrage, providing a number of strict conditions were met. These include: • A Severn barrage should be publicly led as a project and publicly owned as an asset to avoid short-term decisions and ensure the long-term public interest • Full compliance with the EU
Habitats and
Birds Directives is vital, as is a long-term commitment to creating compensatory habitats on an unprecedented scale • Development of a Severn barrage must not divert Government attention away from much wider action on climate change The SDC also raised the challenge of viewing the requirement for compensatory habitat as an "environmental opportunity", through the potential to combine a
climate change mitigation project with the adaptation that will be required to respond to the effects of climate change. A publicly led project would enable the use of a low
discount rate (2%), which would result in a competitive cost of electricity, and would limit the economic impact of even a very large-scale compensatory habitats package. Electricity production costs are not competitive if a commercial discount rate is applied.
UK Government study announced, 2007 A two-year feasibility study was announced in late 2007, and the terms of reference were announced on 22 January 2008, following the publication of the Turning the Tide report from the Sustainable Development Commission. This study builds upon past studies and focuses on a variety of tidal range technologies including barrages and lagoons, and innovative designs such as a tidal fence and a tidal reef in the Severn estuary. The study, initially led by
John Hutton,
Secretary of State for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform, was then led until the
2010 General Election by
Ed Miliband, who was at that time the
Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change. The study aims to gather and assess evidence to enable the Government to decide whether it could support a tidal power scheme in the Severn Estuary and if so on what basis. Key work areas involved are: • The environmental impacts on biodiversity and wildlife; flood management;
geomorphology; water quality; landscape and compensatory habitat; • Engineering and technical areas such as options appraisal; costs; energy yield, design and construction, links to the National Grid and supply chain; • Economic considerations—financing; ownership and energy market impacts; • The regional social, economic and business impacts; • Planning and consents—regulatory compliance; and • Stakeholder engagement and communication. The feasibility study concluded its first phase when a public consultation was launched on 26 January 2009. The consultation covered a proposed short-list of potential tidal power project options from an initial list of 10 schemes, processes that were undertaken during shortlisting and the proposed scope of the Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA). The SEA is a formal environmental assessment of plans or programmes which are likely to have significant effects on the environment. A
consortium led by Parsons Brinckerhoff (PB) and
Black & Veatch (B&V) has been appointed to manage this part of the project. The process is guided by a stakeholder steering group. The study will culminate in a full public consultation in 2010. In July 2009 the Government response to consultation confirmed detailed study would be carried out in the second phase on the five schemes that were proposed for short-listing in January. It also announced work to bring forward 3 further schemes that are in the very early stages of development. In September 2010,
The Observer reported that the government intended to rule out the possibility of public funding for a complete barrage, while recommending that further feasibility studies be carried out on smaller projects. On 18 October the government announced that the project was being abandoned.
Corlan Hafren, 2011 In December 2011 it was reported that the government was talking to
Corlan Hafren, a private sector consortium, about a proposal to build a privately financed barrage from Lavernock Point to Brean Down. The Department for Energy and Climate Change said it had received the first draft of a business case for the scheme, and that it was an "interesting proposition". It has been suggested by
Atkins that similar schemes could be trialled on smaller estuaries in advance of the Severn, for example the
Mersey and
Duddon. However the Hafren Power plan collapsed after it was rejected by three independent committees of MPs and by the Government. On 14 January 2014 it was announced that the chairman and Chief Executive of Hafren Power had resigned, putting an end to the Severn Barrage project.
Severn Estuary Commission, 2024-2025 The
2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine drew attention to uncertainty about energy supply and uncertainty over external energy costs. A Severn barrage is again being considered and an independent commission was started to research this. If successful, it is claimed that the barrage could supply 7% of total UK energy needs. In March 2025, the Severn Estuary Commission concluded that "development of tidal range energy in the Severn Estuary is feasible". ==Economic impact==