It looks as though the tidal lagoon in Swansea bay is to get the go ahead.
In itself it is a big project, but it is also a test bed for things to come. At £1.3bn over its projected lifespan of 120 years it is a bargain when compared to other infrastructure projects. The building of it will put the UK at the cutting edge of the technology, which could be very profitable.
Also. if the producers can get a guaranteed price of £89.90/MWh, and charge us at the current average of about 12.5p/kWh, there is a big pot of money to be made and reinvest.
The main concern now is how it might affect the wildlife of the bay. It could be damaging, neutral or beneficial, nobody knows. However. it has to be built in order to find out and then see what might be needed for future projects.
I was reading the other day about how dams had created a problem with the increase in snails carrying a parasitic worm. Migratory prawns which fed on the the young snails had been locked out by the dams, yet still they were built. Projects are now under way to release young prawns upstream and modify the dams to allow them to migrate as they once did.
If the Swansea lagoon throws up any problems at least we will be able to mitigate them for the future.