Skip to main content

Mersey Gateway shortlisted for the UK’s CIEEM ecology award

The team building the Mersey Gateway bridge has reached the final of a UK national competition that recognises excellence in ecology and environmental management. The project team entered this year’s Chartered Institute of Ecology and Environmental Management (CIEEM) Best Practice awards. The winners highlight outstanding examples of environmental management on large-scale projects.
June 1, 2017 Read time: 3 mins

RSS

The team building the Mersey Gateway bridge has reached the final of a UK national competition that recognises excellence in ecology and environmental management.
 
The project team entered this year’s Chartered Institute of Ecology and Environmental Management (CIEEM) Best Practice awards. The winners highlight outstanding examples of environmental management on large-scale projects.

The 2.13km Mersey Gateway Project, near Liverpool in England, has now been shortlisted as a finalist for the stakeholder engagement award. The 1,000m-long cable stay six-lane bridge consists of four spans supported from three towers in the environmentally sensitive estuary of the Mersey River.

Dr Mark Hampton, the project’s lead ecologist, said the awards recognised the highest standards of professionalism in environmental management across the project site and from Merseylink and its partners AECOM, Kier and the 6126 Mersey Gateway Environmental Trust.
 
“Preserving and improving the natural environment surrounding the project and wider areas was a priority from the beginning,” he said.
 
To reach the final the 6126 Mersey Gateway team had to demonstrate how it met a number of criteria, including how sensitive environmental issues were resolved.
 
“We demonstrated how we had worked with regulators to ensure the construction of the haul roads on the saltmarsh at the start of the project did not interfere with bird nesting season,” he said.
 
“Throughout the project we’ve taken steps to ensure transparent and timely access to information for the project stakeholders such as Natural England, the Environment Agency, the Marine Management Organisation, the Local Planning Authority and research institutions.  
 
“We’ve made it our priority to inform, consult, involve and collaborate with these organisations but also to foster interest and engagement from the local community.
 
“This is done through community engagement events, the establishment of volunteer groups and working closely with local schools to promote the project’s environmental benefits.”
 
The CIEEM Best Practice awards will be held in London on June 21.
 
The Merseylink Consortium was appointed by Halton Borough Council as the project company in 2014, on a 30-year contract to design, build, finance and operate the project. Equity partners are Macquarie Capital Group, BBGI and FCC Construcción. The construction joint venture is made up of Kier Infrastructure and Overseas, Samsung C&T and FCC Construcción. Emovis will deliver and operate tolling solution for the consortium through its merseyflow brand.
 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New training programmes for industry
    July 5, 2016
    Confirming its role as the industry’s most trusted brand in continuing education, IRF has unveiled 14 new courses for mid- to senior-level to road managers. IRF's 2016 Training Catalogue significantly expands the offering of executive courses to include emerging topics such as network safety diagnosis, climate-resilient road infrastructure, electronic toll collection and smart city mobility applications. Each of the new courses not only provides the most relevant, up-to-date information and best practices a
  • ALARM report on UK’s crumbling roads
    March 18, 2025
    ALARM has published a new report on the UK’s crumbling roads.
  • UK’s Stonehenge Bypass approved by Government
    July 17, 2023
    The UK’s Stonehenge Bypass project has been approved by the Government.
  • PPRS: Roads are more than tarmac, they’re a global connection for people
    February 27, 2015
    The successful PPRS event in Paris enabled the sector to set the scene, to see clearly where it’s at technologically. But importantly, it also gave the sector an insight into where it has to go, said Jean-Francois Corte, secretary general of the World Road Association (PIARC), in his closing remarks. It showed that roads are not just a stand-alone national issue for individual governments, but a truly international issue, said Corte on the third and last day of the Pavement Preservation and Recycling Summit