AGGREGATE DREDGING AND THE MARINE ENVIRONMENT The marine Aggregate Levy Sustainability Fund (marine ALSF) programme represents one of the most substantial.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Employability and Employer Engagement
Advertisements

BlackSea Region Meeting Varna Points raised by the EU Maritime Strategy of relevance for PlanCoast.
ActionDescription 1Decisions about planning and managing the coast are governed by general legal instruments. 2Sectoral stakeholders meet on an ad hoc.
Marine and Coastal Management in England and Wales Heidi Roberts, Principal Environmental Consultant Plancoast Conference, Berlin 21 st November 2007.
PLANNING AND RADIOACTIVE WASTE Nuleaf Seminar– Radioactive Waste Management Mark Plummer, Minerals and Waste Planning, Department for Communities and Local.
Options appraisal, the business case & procurement
Department of Fisheries Activities Specific to the SMMA Thomas Nelson Department of Fisheries Ministry of Agriculture, Lands, Forestry and Fisheries SAINT.
The Marine and Coastal Access Bill A New Framework for the Seas JOHN CLORLEY – MARINE CONSERVATION ZONE PROJECT DIRECTOR.
What Marine Spatial Planning means to Natural England Tammy Smalley Team Leader for National Marine & Coast Evidence Team.
Gero Vella Offshore renewable energy: a business perspective On behalf of: Renewable Energy Systems Limited (RES) & Centrica Renewable Energy Limited.
Mass Shelter Capability Project
“International context and response to draft D5b – a conservation agencies view” PROTECT Workshop, Aix en Provence. 14 May 2008.
MARINE SCOTLAND Directorate of Scottish Government: Marine policy
ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT SEA Jamie Byfield SEA Technical Officer HRA & EIA Cara Davidson Policy Manager.
The Challenge of Managing Marine Resources Industry's role in managing marine resources Peter Barham. Environmental Consultant.
BWEA OFFSHORE CONFERENCE 17 – 18 APRIL 2002 Offshore Consents Planning for the Future Nigel Peace Director, Energy Regulation Department of Trade & Industry.
Air Quality and Land Use Planning Land Use Consultants 11 th March 2008 Susanne Underwood.
The EU Water Framework Directive and Sediments The Water Framework Directive was transposed into law in EU Member States at the end of Nearly two.
Managing Marine Conservation Zones Dr Angela Moffat Marine Bill Project Manager Natural England
Shetland – Marine Spatial Planning in Practice Local Advisory Group: Local Advisory Group: Shetland Islands Council, Scottish Natural Heritage, Scottish.
Dermot Grimson Crown Estate. OFFSHORE WIND ENERGY UK SUPPLY CHAIN EVENTS: Dermot Grimson Head of External Affairs, The Crown Estate.
Natural England and MEDIN, Challenges and Achievements Ian Saunders Lead Adviser, Geographic Information and Analysis Services Team.
Marine Strategy Framework Directive Consultation on Good Environmental Status Descriptor 7 – Hydrographical Conditions Dr Alejandro Gallego Marine Scotland.
Possible future changes to the marine planning and management framework and implications for aquaculture John Hambrey SARF046 – Socioeconomic assessment.
COastal REsearch & POlicy INTegration Working Together for Coastal Planning around the Severn Estuary Dr Tim Stojanovic, Cardiff University/COREPOINT project.
Case Study Presentation to MESH Conference Regional Environmental Monitoring & Mapping in The East Channel Region.
SNH PERSPECTIVE ON PLANNING AND THE ENVIRONMENT Derek Manson Planning Adviser.
Aberdeenshire Local Development Plan 2016 Identification of issues.
Drawing strength from the depths Offshore Development: experiences of the marine aggregates industry Mark Russell British Marine Aggregate Producers Association.
1 Burns Beach near Brighton, Western Australia RPS has won a series of awards from the Urban Development Institute of Australia - including the Water Sensitive.
Guidance for AONB Partnership Members Welsh Member Training January 26/
Marine Natura in UK offshore SAC consultation Charlotte Johnston, Mark Tasker, Paolo Pizzolla JNCC North Sea RAC.
FUTURE OFFSHORE Update on the Consultation Nigel Peace Licensing & Consents Unit 27 March 2003.
Marine Planning: The role of the MMO and Partnerships Steve Brooker Head of Marine Planning.
DEC Marine WALIS Marine Group 24 September 2009 Mark Sheridan.
Marine Spatial Planning for Wave Energy Development in Oregon Kate Sherman, M.S. Candidate Marine Resource Management College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric.
MESH UK Workshop 19 October 2006 Introduction Dr Paul Gilliland Marine Policy Adviser and MESH Partner Lead Natural England.
Regional Compliance Monitoring A marine aggregate industry perspective Mark Russell Director, British Marine Aggregate Producers Association.
C r e a t I n g s u s t a I n a b l e s o l u t I o n s I n t h e m a r I n e e n v I r o n m e n t Potentially Polluting Wrecks (PPW) UK Risk Database.
Review of the implementation in England of the Habitats and Wild Birds Directives Nature Directors 23 May 2012 Robin Mortimer, Defra.
The Marine Bill. The Bill covers... Marine Management Organisation Marine planning Streamlined marine licensing Nature conservation Improved inshore fisheries.
Marine Renewables Marine Renewables and integrated planning Mike Neilson Director, Marine Scotland Scottish Government.
SPATIAL PLANNING AND OFFSHORE WIND FARMS IN THE UK Dr Stephen Jay Sheffield Hallam University, UK.
Monitoring Programme Design in Transitional and Coastal Waters - Classification Issues Dave Jowett, Coast Group Chair and NEA GIG Co-ordinator CIS Workshop.
Marine Planning update Steve Brooker Head of Marine Planning.
Building Resilience Well-being of Future Generations Act and the Environment (Wales) Bill Emily Finney – Resilience Policy, Welsh Government.
Ethical and democratic issues that impact on rural communities Or
1 Port Development and the Reuse of Dredged Material in the Stour and Orwell Estuaries Dr Andrew Birchenough Dr Chris Vivian The Centre for Environment,
Marine Planning Issues Tim Norman Senior Manager Planning 23 November 2010.
Strategic Regional Coastal Monitoring Programme in England
Building Capacity: Responding to SEA Consultation Lucia Susani Environmental Assessment Policy and Process Manager Environment Agency of England and Wales.
Deerin Babb-Brott, Director National Ocean Council Office National Boating Federation 2013 Annual Meeting.
Planning Scotland’s Seas consultation Seas Consultation 2013.
Southern North Sea Marine Protected Areas – Proposed Fisheries Management Measures.
Building Capacity for Sustainable and Responsible Development in the Bismarck Sea is a collaboration between Papua New Guinea’s Conservation and Environmental.
The draft Marine Bill A New Framework for UK Seas 20 May 2008.
An Overview of Coastal Management Issues Overview and Scrutiny Co-ordinating and Call-in Committee, 10 March Andrew Wainwright, Environmental Health.
ISO Session 3 Environmental Management and Ethics in Management.
EIAScreening6(Gajaseni, 2007)1 II. Scoping. EIAScreening6(Gajaseni, 2007)2 Scoping Definition: is a process of interaction between the interested public,
IPPC A general overview Nigel Barraclough Policy Adviser Industrial Pollution Control Branch Air and Environment Quality Division. Taiwanese Environmental.
Development Permit System. Development Permit System 2 Disclaimer  The information presented is provided as background information to facilitate understanding.
Regional Monitoring Programme Developments to Date
Pevensey Bay Sea Defences PPP
Local Asset Management Pilots Scheme
COSA Committee Meeting
Marine planning in Scotland
Slaughden SMP Policy Review
The Green Paper on Marine Knowledge: initial comments from Hydrographic Offices* *SHOM,
Update from Marine Scotland November 2018
Candidate Pack Operations Officer.
Presentation transcript:

AGGREGATE DREDGING AND THE MARINE ENVIRONMENT The marine Aggregate Levy Sustainability Fund (marine ALSF) programme represents one of the most substantial investments in UK marine research. The research focuses on improving the way that the marine aggregate industry is planned, assessed and managed. A goal for the programme was to deliver practical outcomes that improve understanding and knowledge of the environmental implications of marine aggregate extraction in order to ensure such practices are sustainable. Outcomes should increase certainty and provide greater confidence to regulators, advisors and industry alike. This overview report demonstrates that the marine ALSF programme has delivered significant improvements to our understanding across a wide range of environmental disciplines. Many of the research outputs generated through the marine ALSF programme and described in this report can provide significant added value to the wider marine science that underpins the planning and management of many activities within the UK marine area.

MARINE AGGREGATE DREDGING AND THE COASTLINE – A GUIDANCE NOTE This guidance note, which has been developed by the British Marine Aggregate Producers Association and The Crown Estate from well established approaches to assessing coastal impacts, seeks to establish best practice for the British marine aggregate industry and advises on the scope, standards and transparency that are expected in a Coastal Impact Study (CIS). It is designed to be a valuable reference for stakeholders and consultees, including dredging companies, consultants, government regulators and agencies, local authorities, NGOs, other seabed and coastal users and the public.

The Crown Estate and mineral rights The Crown Estate owns virtually the entire seabed out to the 12 nautical mile territorial limit as well as having the rights to explore and utilise the natural resources of the UK continental shelf such as aggregates. As the landowner, The Crown Estate issues commercial production agreements for marine aggregate dredging, although the marine licence to dredge is given by the regulator – either the Marine Management Organisation in English waters (a Non-Departmental Public Body) or Natural Resources Wales in Welsh waters (a Welsh Government Sponsored Body). The Crown Estate has two main objectives: to enhance the value of the estate and the income it generates; and to manage the estate in a responsible manner. Royalties from mineral extraction benefit the taxpayer by contributing revenue from national assets directly to the Treasury.

Map of the coastline showing the location of aggregate licence areas in the UK and adjacent coast of continental Europe. Courtesy of BMAPA.

Sources of marine and land- won sand and gravel in Southern Britain.

COASTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT CRITERIA The set of criteria that should be used when assessing the effects of proposed marine aggregate dredging on the coastline around the UK have developed over time (CIRIA, 1998); they have been incorporated into historic government policy (MMG1, 2002). The criteria have been designed to include all possible mechanisms by which marine aggregate dredging could affect a coastline. A Coastal Impact Study (CIS) should, as a minimum, assess whether coastlines could be unacceptably affected by the dredging plan. The CIS should include consideration of the following criteria: Changes in nearshore wave conditions as a result of changes in the wave patterns over the dredged area; Changes in nearshore wave conditions as a result of the alteration of sandbanks, or other significant seabed features, by the proposed dredging; Changes in the nearshore tidal currents due to bed lowering in the dredging area; Any draw-down into the dredged area, of beaches or sandbanks; Changes in sediment transport patterns, interrupting supply to coastal sandbanks or beaches; Changes to the form and function of any nearby sandbanks.

CONSIDERATION OF CUMULATIVE IMPACTS Within some seabed regions, for example off the coastline from the east of the Isle of Wight to Brighton, there are a number of existing dredging and application areas lying between five to 15km offshore. Considered alone, dredging in any and each of these areas is unlikely to result in any changes along the coastline. Established best practice requires assessment of the cumulative effects on the coastline of removing aggregate from all these dredging areas. In some regions it is common for waves travelling towards the coast to pass over several of dredging areas and be successively altered. In this situation, a study of potential cumulative effects will be required.

Protected Habitats and Communities Communities and habitats that have statutory protection under the EU Habitats Directive and are likely to occur in the vicinity of aggregate dredge sites include: Sandbanks that are covered by the sea at all states of the tide; Geogenic reefs; Biogenic reefs A typical Horse Mussel bed showing the accumulation of silt and attached fauna.

Map summarising records of shipping losses on the East Coast, drawn from the National Record of the Historic Environment (NRHE) in the course of a pre-ALSF project for BMAPA and English Heritage.

IMPACTS ON FISHERIES Availability of Information. Risk Assessment for Fisheries in the EIA for marine aggregate extraction licences. Overlap between fisheries and other marine activities.

ASSESSMENT OF IMPACTS OF DREDGING - METHODS 1. Changes in nearshore wave conditions. 2. Changes in nearshore tidal currents. 3. Beach and sandbank draw-down. 4. Changes in sediment transport and supply patterns; Information requirements; Assessment methods.

Swath bathymetry image of the seabed in the English Channel off Hastings with a range of transverse sand bedforms.

COASTAL IMPACT STUDY - REPORTING The report on a Coastal Impact Study will typically contain the following sections: A non-technical summary (NTS) to support the detailed technical report. The NTS should outline the methods of assessment and conclusions for the lay reader; A detailed technical report should contain a comprehensive report of the entire CIS process, together with supporting data included in an appendix and/or a CD.

MONITORING To date, CISs have typically predicted a series of minor impacts, which will not result in significant changes at the coast. To ensure that the CIS predictions are robust and accurate and to safeguard against unexpected and unacceptable environmental impacts occurring, it is common for some form of physical processes monitoring to occur throughout the duration of the permission. This monitoring, which is reviewed on a minimum 5-yearly basis through the substantive review process of marine licence decisions undertaken by the regulator, provides confidence in the outcomes of the CIS process and allows the licensed activity to be re-assessed, modified, or even halted, if any additional concerns are identified.

Monitoring of dredging adjacent to a sandbank.

Marine Environment Protection Fund Steering Group Members British Marine Aggregate Producers Association (BMAPA) Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs English Heritage Joint Nature Conservation Committee Marine Management Organisation Natural England The Crown Estate © Crown Copyright 2013, ISBN: Published by The Crown Estate. This report is available on the website at

Thank you. Tel: 0044 (0)