The Environment Agency has issued an invitation for expressions of interest to develop hydropower on a further three of its weirs on the Thames: at Marlow, Boulters and Boveney despite a promise from the Regional Director in 2008 that no other Thames weirpools would be developed for hydropower until the first, at Romney, had been fully evaluated for its environmental impact. Romney has yet to be built.
 This  invitation follows a similar invitation on three other weirs last year  (Teddington, Bell and Sunbury), and others that the Agency is working on with  community groups at Goring and Osney (the latter is in addition to one already  approved on the weir), and others which are proposed at Abingdon and Sonning,  making a total of 11 weirs.
This  invitation follows a similar invitation on three other weirs last year  (Teddington, Bell and Sunbury), and others that the Agency is working on with  community groups at Goring and Osney (the latter is in addition to one already  approved on the weir), and others which are proposed at Abingdon and Sonning,  making a total of 11 weirs.
  
  The Angling  Trust has written to the Environment Agency’s Chief Executive strongly  condemning the press release and demanding a retraction of the invitation.  Angling’s representative body believes that a series of developments of this  nature should be subject to an environmental impact assessment at a catchment  scale. Developers should not be encouraged to draw up detailed plans for  schemes, potentially supported by public funds, until this important scientific  work has been done.
  
  Weirpools are  vital to the habitat and fisheries diversity of heavily impounded lowland  rivers such as the Thames. They are the only features that offer suitable  spawning opportunities, clean gravel shallows, for flow-dependent species such  as barbel, dace and chub, among other species. The concern is that reducing the  flow for much of the year will substantially affect this habitat, a view that  has been substantiated by a recent independent expert report that the Angling  Trust’s legal arm recently commissioned to examine the impact of a scheme on  the Trent.
  
  Hydropower  schemes have several other potential impacts on fisheries, depending on the  design. The EA’s Good Practice Guidelines, referred to in its press release,  are currently under review after two reports from an independent fisheries  scientist found that they were inadequate to protect fisheries and the  ecological status of rivers.
  
  Angling Trust  Chief Executive Mark Lloyd said: “It is outrageous that the organisation  charged with protecting our fisheries is selling off the river’s flow at 11  weirs without even considering the cumulative impact on fish and without having  adequate guidelines in place. The River Thames won a prestigious international  award last year for the work being done to restore and improve the river.  Hydropower developments on this scale could reverse all that good work at a  stroke and destroy a really valuable fishery.”
  
James Page,  Chairman of the Thames Anglers Conservancy said: “weir pools are really  important to anglers and fish. We are very concerned about the lack of scientific  data available proving that these schemes won’t damage the ecology of the  river.”
  
  Source: Angling Trust Fishing News
  
  
  
  
  
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