Embankment flood work completed

wallasey_toe_4 - photo credit Geoff Oldfield Mersey Images CROP
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A one kilometre stretch of the Wirral coastline from Leasowe to Meols has benefited from a strengthening of the sea embankment.

Wirral Council says 1,250 properties along the foreshore will be better protected for at least the next 30 years after it was bolstered by the installation of more than 7,000 tonnes of rock at its ‘toe’.

In a scheme funded by a grant of nearly £1.4m from the Environment Agency, the new rock defence will protect the embankment from coastal erosion that was threatening the integrity of the existing structure.

The council says the works, which were carried out by Jones Bros Civil Engineering UK, have been completed on time and within budget and in line with planning consent and marine licence conditions.

Over the next 30 years it is estimated the works will provide more than £58 million in flood risk reduction benefits for the investment of just £1.36 million.

Cllr Liz Grey, Chair of the Environment, Climate Emergency and Transport Committee, said: “Wirral Council has long-standing policies and strategies in place to manage and maintain our shoreline to protect, not just life and property, but also the significant environmental designations that covers much of our coastline.

“The need for work to strengthen the toe along the Wallasey embankment was first identified in the Wirral Coastal Strategy that was approved nine years ago to mitigate the impacts of the Meols channel running along the toe near to Leasowe Lighthouse.”

Ollie Hope, Environment Agency Area Flood and Coastal Risk Manager for Cheshire and Merseyside, added: “The Environment Agency is delighted to have worked with Wirral Council on this significant investment to the North Wirral coast.

“This new scheme will better protect North Wirral now and for future generations as sea levels rise and storms become more extreme because of climate change.”

Top photo credit: Geoff Oldfield, Mersey Images