Jubilee flood relief channel


Jubilee flood relief channel

This publication is available at https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/jubilee-river-flood-alleviation-scheme/jubilee-river-flood-alleviation-scheme

The Jubilee flood relief channel was built by the Environment Agency and opened in 2002. It is part of the Maidenhead Windsor and Eton flood alleviation scheme (MWEFAS). The channel is a man made, 11.6 kilometre stretch of naturalistic river and habitats.

MWEFAS also includes defences in north Maidenhead and Cookham. It reduces the risk of flooding to approximately 3,000 properties in:

* Maidenhead

* Windsor

* Eton

* Cookham

In flood conditions, we split some of the water away from the River Thames through the Jubilee. The Jubilee provides extra space for this water before it re-joins the River Thames at Datchet.

We operate weir gates at Taplow to control the amount of water being split into the Jubilee. As the flow in the River Thames increases, we open the gates gradually in small increments to allow water to flow through the channel.

The Jubilee:

* is not designed to reduce flood risk to communities upstream or downstream of the scheme

* does not adversely impact communities upstream or downstream

There are public footpaths alongside the Jubilee for most of its length that are suitable for:

* walking

* running

* cycling

* horse riding

For safety reasons we close parts of the footpath when we operate the Jubilee. No swimming is permitted anywhere along the Jubilee flood relief channel as it is not safe for swimming at any time of the year.

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