The State’s marine planning regulator is engaging with Wicklow County Council after concerns were raised about beach material removal works carried out in Bray harbour following Storm Chandra earlier this year.
The Maritime Area Regulatory Authority (MARA) confirmed that its compliance and enforcement team is engaging with the local authority after receiving a complaint from a member of the public.
Left to right: Barbara Gordon and Lucy Watson with some of the swans at Bray harbour, where residents have raised concerns about the removal of beach material earlier this year
Residents in Bray have called for the immediate reinstatement of the swan shoreline habitat following confirmation that Wicklow County Council did not obtain prior authorisation for the harbour works.
Swans are a protected species under the Wildlife Acts, and have congregated for many years in Bray harbour at the mouth of the River Dargle.
Wicklow County Council said it undertook “emergency works”, involving the removal of a “large quantity of material” from Bray harbour to prevent flooding after winter storms.
Excavation works carried out by Wicklow County Council at Bray harbour earlier this year following winter storms. Photo: Lucy Watson
The council said the work was necessary to ensure the sea could not overtop the harbour wall onto the public road and affect access to nearby industrial units.
Under marine planning legislation, coastal works of this nature may require a Maritime Area Consent (MAC) issued by MARA. Such works may also require permission under the Planning & Development Act 2000, unless declared emergency works by the chief executive of a local authority.
Residents Barbara Gordon and Lucy Watson said the shoreline environment had become a “degraded and relatively hostile environment for both the swans and other resident seabirds”.
They said the swans appeared distressed and called for the habitat area to be reinstated.
Watson also said the beach had acted as a natural buffer and questioned the reasoning behind removing beach material to prevent sea overtopping.

















































