The tonnage of material being moved between
terminals and jetties on the tidal river Thames leapt by more than a million
tonnes in 2012.
3.3 million tonnes of materials, including
vegetable oil, sand, gravel, tunnelling spoil and household waste, was moved by
river in 2012, up from two million tonnes the year before. Thames Water’s Lea
Tunnel project was a major factor in this growth. So far, the project has
generated over 850,000 tonnes material movements at wharves in the boroughs of
Newham, Dagenham and Greenwich and has seen the use of Bow Creek return to
levels last seen in the 1960s.
“The increase in movement of materials last
year is just the start to this ‘river renaissance’,” says PLA’s head of
planning and partnerships, James Trimmer. “This year will see Crossrail’s use
of the river start in earnest. They have committed to moving more than four
million tonnes of tunnelling spoil by river from East London to Wallasea
Island, where RSPB is creating a nature reserve and the segments that the will
form the tunnel lining will arrive from Chatham to east London by barge. And in
a few years’ time Thames Water’s use of the river will grow further when its
Thames Tideway Tunnel scheme gets underway.
“This increased river use matters to
Londoners. It’s something we have worked on with the Mayor’s Office, the
Greater London Authority and Transport for London, making sure for example that
wharves, the essential ‘slip road’ onto our marine superhighway are safeguarded
for port use. Every 1,000 tonne barge slipping quietly down the Thames keeps 40
lorries off our roads, cutting congestion, pollution and improving safety in
residential communities.”
Operational wharves handling London’s
intraport trade run the length of the river from Gravesend in the east to
Wandsworth in the west, with Tower Hamlets, the City and many others in
between.
The increasing use of the river is
prompting new companies, such as Brentwood-based S Walsh, to start river
operations bringing new tugs and barges to the river. Training for new skippers
and deckhands is also being improved, with a group of river operators and
senior officials connected to the river Thames founding the Thames Training
Alliance. This will give new entrants into the resurgent industry a clear,
structured career across both freight and passenger operations.
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