º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Economic Development

Pro-growth group launches campaign for a third Menai crossing

Britain Remade wants Ministers in Cardiff to reverse the decision to halt proposals for a new crossing

The potential 'Purple option' for a third crossing over the Menai Strait(Image: Welsh Government)

A pro-growth campaign group has launched a campaign for a third Menai Strait crossing after the Welsh Government’s roads review halted the project. Britain Remade is calling on Ministers in Cardiff to reverse the decision as well as restore other major road projects axed in the review.

The campaign group is led by Sam Richards, a former energy and climate adviser to ex-PM Boris Johnson, and the push to bring back scrapped road schemes in Wales is backed by Ynys Mon Tory MP Virginia Crosbie as well as former Welsh Government Economy Minister Ken Skates.

It has even started a political-style leafleting campaign to drum up support from North Wales households. Britain Remade said its campaigns are funded by grants from a range of organisations, that include European Climate Foundation, Joseph Rowntree Foundation, and Quadrature Climate Foundation.

Read more: Broadband firm Ogi lands 10-year deal to supply leisure park

The group claims the new crossing - which could cost over £400m - would slash congestion and emissions, and support investment on Anglesey. They argue that a third crossing over the Strait would secure a new nuclear power station at Wylfa, creating thousands of high-quality jobs and providing clean, secure domestic energy.

The Welsh Government said it has not ruled out a new crossing but that even if they supported the project the money is not currently there to fund the £400m scheme.

Every day 42,300 vehicles rely on the two 19th Century bridges linking Anglesey with mainland Wales. The temporary closure last year of the ageing Menai Bridge for repairs caused traffic chaos and economic pain for people and businesses in North West Wales. However, plans for a new crossing fell victim to a decision to scrap 55 road building projects on climate grounds.

A poll by Opinium, carried out for Britain Remade, found that cancelling the new road link to Anglesey is opposed by close to half (46%) of people within the region and supported by just a third (33%). The poll also found that half of people across Wales (49%) are opposed to the "ban" on new roads being built, although the Welsh Government have stated road building has not been banned in Wales - with future plans including a new highway around congestion hit Llanbedr, in Gwynedd.