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The Crown Estate - A Brief History. 1760 George III: the land revenues of the Crown were surrendered to ParliamentCivil List payment in returnSimilar surrender has been made by all succeeding SovereignsProposed changes announced in Comprehensive Spending Review October 2010The Crown Estate Act 1961 - Sustainable management and long term view (commercialism and stewardship).
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1. Presentation to The Local Government AssociationThe Crown Estate and Offshore Renewables25 November 2010 David Charlesworth
Senior External Relations Manager
Anne Savage
Round 3 Consents Advisor
2. The Crown Estate - A Brief History 1760 George III: the land revenues of the Crown were surrendered to Parliament
Civil List payment in return
Similar surrender has been made by all succeeding Sovereigns
Proposed changes announced in Comprehensive Spending Review October 2010
The Crown Estate Act 1961 - Sustainable management and long term view (commercialism and stewardship)
3. The Crown Estate now 2010 Capital Value of £6.6bn
Net revenue all paid to UK Treasury £210.7m in 2009-10
The Urban Estate - urban property including Regent Street & Pall Mall in London, key worker housing, new investments
The Rural Estate - 110,000 ha of rural land and property
The Windsor Estate
The Marine Estate
4. How we work Core values of Commercialism, Integrity and Stewardship
Manage the assets on behalf of the country
Net revenue all paid to UK Treasury
The Crown Estate is a landowner not a regulator
It is not part of Government but works closely with Government Departments, the devolved administrations, statutory bodies and other key stakeholders.
5. The Marine Estate Approx. 17,250km of foreshore, around half of UK total
Approx. half of UK estuaries & tidal river beds
Ownership of the territorial seabed
Rights to explore and exploit the natural resources of the Continental Shelf
The Renewable Energy Zone – rights vested in us by the Energy Act 2004
Rights of carbon dioxide and methane gas storage – vested in us by the Energy Act 2008
6. The Marine Estate does not include Water column
Fisheries
Rights to Oil, Gas and Coal
Public rights of navigation
7. Activities on the Marine Estate Marine Aggregates
Moorings, Marinas, Ports
Pipelines and Telecommunication Cables
Electricity transmission cables
Aquaculture
Renewable Energy
Carbon capture and storage
Gas storage
8. Relevance to LGA Coastal SIG ‘Onshore’ aspects of development
Scale of Round 3
Involvement of Local Authorities
Opportunities for Local Authorities
9. The role of The Crown Estate
10. Offshore Wind
11. Round 3 – A different approach
12. Offshore wind, IPC & Local Authorities 32GW = approx 45 project applications before 2015
Pre-application
SoCC
Coordination between Local Authorities
OFTO regime
13. Offshore Wind Opportunities Local investment and job creation
Ports and harbours
Manufacturing
O&M support
14. Summary The scale of offshore wind development is increasing.
Offshore wind applications via the IPC will demand increasing input from Local Authorities.
Offshore wind offers opportunities to local areas in terms of investment and jobs.
16. Marine Spatial Planning Marine Management Organisation (MMO)
Marine Conservation Zone (MCZ) projects