Abingdon Reservoir Explained

Abingdon Reservoir
Location:Oxfordshire
Coords:51.6344°N -1.3542°W
Lake Type:Bunded reservoir (Proposed)
Inflow:River Thames
Outflow:River Thames
Pushpin Map:Oxfordshire
Pushpin Map Alt:Map of Oxfordshire
Basin Countries:United Kingdom
Area:6.7km2
Depth:22.4m (73.5feet)
Volume:150e6m3

The Abingdon Reservoir (also known as the South East Strategic Reservoir Option, or SESRO) is a long-term proposal for fresh water storage for the Home Counties. Located south west of Abingdon, Oxfordshire in the mid-west of the Thames Basin, it is intended to help support water supply provision in the south-east of England. The proposals have been developed with Southern Water and Affinity Water and is intended to serve all three company’s customers.[1]

Proposals

The proposal arose in 2006 by Thames Water.[2] In 2007 the Environment Agency opined that need for this was not proven.[3] Further arguments were put but the near-term-demand case was rejected in 2011.[4] In 2023, following a period of consultation, a revised version increased the proposal to 150e9l.[5]

This would make Abingdon the second-largest reservoir in England by capacity, exceeded only by Kielder Water at 200e9l, pushing Rutland Water into third place at 124e9l. Across the whole of the UK, only seven Scottish lochs have greater freshwater storage by volume.

Since 2018, a longer-term proposal stands, for its building, by 2043 to cater to projected population growth in the Thames Basin.[6] [7]

Reasons for the construction

See also: Climate of the United Kingdom. The main reason to build is that the South-East is facing significant seasonal water stress. Factors are the rain shadow behind the prevailing westerly winds and western hills. Eastern counties lack the rainfall of the west; their average annual rainfall being 500-750mm. The west receives around 1800-2800mm.

Average population density is higher in the eastern than western counties; London houses 13.5% of the UK's population. This is the greatest concentration of domestic water usage. Roughly 22% of water use is domestic; 75% is from all types of industry.

Counter-arguments

GARD or the 'Group Against Reservoir Development' have counter-arguments, local, national, and international comparators.[8]

External links

51.6344°N -1.3542°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2024-01-29 . South East Strategic Reservoir Option (SESRO) – a new reservoir for the south east . 2024-03-05 . Thames Water Resources Management Plan . en.
  2. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/5343646.stm Reservoir 'biggest in 25 years'
  3. Web site: Need for reservoir 'not proven' . 5 January 2007 . . 30 August 2009 .
  4. Web site: Abingdon £1bn reservoir plan rejected by government . 4 March 2011 . . 7 May 2018 .
  5. News: Inman . Phillip . 2023-04-22 . Lake or mistake? The row over water firms, drought and Abingdon’s new super-reservoir . en-GB . The Observer . 2023-09-12 . 0029-7712.
  6. Web site: Abingdon reservoir proposals questioned by Oxfordshire County Council . 18 April 2018 . . 7 May 2018 .
  7. Web site: Abingdon Reservoir back on the cards! . 19 February 2018 . CPRE . 7 May 2018 .
  8. http://www.abingdonreservoir.org.uk/ Group Against Reservoir Development. http://www.abingdonreservoir.org.uk
  9. http://www.abingdonreservoir.org.uk/downloads/GARD%20review%20of%20UTR%20resilience%20final-21-08-17.pdf
  10. https://www.solarpowerportal.co.uk/news/belectric_and_first_solar_connect_46mw_oxfordshire_solar_farm East Hanney solar farm