World Water Day 2023: The State of English Chalk Streams

On this World Water Day, we want to focus our attention on the importance of chalk streams and advocate for the sustainable management of these unique and vulnerable freshwater resources.

Chalk streams are a quintessential part of the English landscape and are home to an incredibly special array of fauna and flora. These rivers are also a crucial freshwater resource, providing millions of people in the UK with water. However, over-abstraction, abuse, and climate change is placing huge pressure on these unique and vulnerable ecosystems.  

What are chalk streams and how are they under threat?

Chalk streams are some of the planet’s rarest habitats and 85% of them are found in Southern and Eastern England. Chalk streams in their natural condition are home to a profusion of wildlife.  Botanically they are the most biodiverse of all English rivers.  For invertebrates, fish, birds and mammals, they offer a vast range of habitats. 

However, chalk streams are under immense pressure. There are a host of reasons why our chalk streams are at risk.  This includes pollution, a decline in native species, development and population growth in the South East of England, and the fact that we simply waste too much water.

The most pressing of all is the low flows and chronic over-abstraction. We have become dependent on chalk streams for water supply and, in recent years, we have simply not had enough rain to support the level of abstraction still taking place.  Our chalk streams are, quite simply, dying from a lack of water. 

Abstraction

First of all, chalk streams are being drained of water by companies trying to meet the nation’s increasing thirst. This process began in the 1970s as more and more homes were being built and fitted out with dishwashers, showers, washing machines and other domestic appliances. These devices have helped to cause a 70% increase in household water use in the UK and, as a result, abstraction rates have soared across the country. This has only been exacerbated by the lack of investment water companies have put into water storage infrastructure. No new reservoirs have been built for decades, so now water companies are taking more and more water out of rivers as a result, particularly in drought conditions when rivers are at their most vulnerable.   

Agricultural irrigation also has a large impact on chalk streams. More than 1,000 agri-businesses depend on irrigation to produce fruit and vegetables for the nation’s wholesalers, supermarkets, and food service sectors.  However, irrigation water use is concentrated in the months and years when resources are most constrained. As a result, in some dry summers, irrigation of food crops can be the largest abstractor in some chalk streams.

Climate Change

Abstraction is not the only problem.  There is also the impact of global warming, which is triggering more and more heatwaves that in turn are helping to dry out streams and rivers.

Whilst we typically associate water security as an issue for drier climates, hotter drier summers and less predictable rainfall has led to increased drought risk and possible water shortages in the UK.  

This threat is now becoming a major concern after the Met Office warned recently that over the next five years, there is now a 40% chance that global temperatures will reach 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels, the upper limit that climate scientists want to set for the warming of our planet.

In recent years, rising numbers of heatwaves have led to increasing numbers of chalk streams being drained dry in many places: some have stopped flowing in the headwaters or dried up in low rainfall years. Some have stopped flowing at all. Most have been reduced to shadows of what they once were.

 Conclusion

There is no doubt that we are on the verge of a water shortage crisis in the UK, which is already impacting our chalk streams and other rivers. With growing pressure from climate change, population growth and pollution, ensuring no further deterioration will be challenging without a step change in management. 

At River Action, we want to see greater protection for these iconic and globally important rivers. Government, regulators and water companies must collectively acknowledge the conservation value of the chalk streams if we are to make considerable progress towards protecting these precious habitats for wildlife and for future generations.

International Women’s Day 2023: Women at the heart of the plight to Rescue Britain’s Rivers

On International Women’s Day, we’re celebrating some of the women who are playing a critical role in fighting the destruction of our rivers and pushing for change that prioritises our precious waterways and wildlife and people over profit and greed.

Angela Jones: Wild Woman of the Wye

Angela Jones – known as the ‘Wild Woman of the Wye’ – is an outdoor adventurer, wild swim specialist and kayaking guide who has a deep connection with the River Wye – one of Britain’s longest and most famous rivers.  

Angela plays a critical role in raising awareness of the declining state of the Wye, tirelessly gathering data and information on the river’s deteriorating condition to hold those to account who continue to pollute and exploit it.

In 2021, Angela bought a coffin, marked it with the words “Death of the Wye”, and towed it down stretches of the Wye to bring attention to the dire state of the river. And last summer, she entered the waters of the Wye towing a large model egg box to highlight the horrific impact that phosphates from intensive poultry units littered along the catchment are having on the Wye’s delicate ecosystem.   

Angela has also appeared on BBC ONE’s Panorama programme about how pollution is killing our waterways; she helped both George Monbiot with his film Rivercide and the BBC with their documentary: “Our Troubled Rivers”, and we will soon see her and the Wye appearing on BBC’s Countryfile.

Find out more about Angela’s exceptional work here.

Rachel Salvidge and Leana Hosea: Watershed Investigations

Rachael Salvidge and Leana Holsea are the founders of Watershed Investigations, – independent, not-for-profit investigative journalism that partners with national and international media to shine light on all aspects of the water crisis. 

Since its launch in 2022, Rachael and Leana have played a key role in uncovering high-impact stories in the UK and abroad.  They focus on evidence-based stories that “hold the powerful to account, uncover abuses, illuminate overlooked stories and champion solutions”.  

A recent example includes their investigation that revealed a terrifying scale of ‘forever chemical’ pollution in UK waterways.  It launched on the front page of the Guardian on the 27th February and included seven extraordinary stories that stretched over three days.

Becky Malby: Ilkley Clean River Group

Becky Malby is the co-founder of the Ilkley Clean River Group – a campaign set up three years ago by residents who were shocked at the way the River Warfe was being treated as an open sewer.

As a group, they were successful at getting the first ever Bathing Water designation on a UK river in 2020. This ensured Environmental Agency are testing of the quality of the river Warfe, instillation of signage so that the public knows how polluted the river is, and placed increasing pressure on the regulators and water company to do their duty to clean up the river.

Becky has been a driving force for exposing the failure of the water industry and regulator at both a local and national level. Her work with the Ilkley Clean Rivers group has resulted in huge investments from Yorkshire Water in upgrading sewerage works around Ilkley. 

Find out more about the Clean Ilkley Rivers Group here.

Morgan Schofield, Patricia Ronanand Jennie Hewitt: The ‘3 Wyes Women’

In August 2020, Jennie, Morgan and Patricia kayaked and walked the length of the river Wye,nearly 250 km in length, to raise awareness of the river’s depleted ecosystem and the biodiversity that is under threat.

They chronicled their trip on social media, and their campaign was followed closely by our founder, Charles Watson. It was their tales of degradation that prompted Charles to launch River Action in February 2021. 

Today they continue to raise awareness and are all involved in regularly monitoring the river’s condition.

You can read more about the brilliant 3 Wyes Women here

Amy Slack: Campaigns Manager at River Action

Last, but certainly not least, is our very own Campaigns Manager, Amy Slack.

Amy has worked in the environmental sector for over 15 years, and in that time has become a leading voice for better water quality.

As Head of Campaigns & Policy at Surfers Against Sewage, Amy played a key role exposing the true extent of the UK’s sewage scandal – calling out polluters on their destructive habits, demanding urgent government action, and leading SAS’s public protests.    

Having recently joined the River Action team Amy’s knowledge and experience will play an integral part in our mission to rescue Brittons rivers, helping ensure that clean rivers are at the top of every politician, voter, business leader and consumer’s priorities. 

Find out more about the role Amy will play in rescuing Britain’s rivers here.

RIVER ACTION’S ‘PLAN TO SAVE THE WYE’ CAMPAIGN: ONE YEAR ON

It has been exactly one year since we successfully launched a campaign calling for urgent action to save the River Wye from irreversible damage caused by agricultural pollution.  Twelve months on, we reflect on some of the highlights of our campaign thus far.

This week marks exactly one year since the successful launch of our campaign to save the River Wye – targeting polluting industries whose dramatic proliferation across the Wye catchment is now recognised as one of the prime causes of the desperate recent environmental collapse of the river. Working closely with other NGOs, activists and local communities, we have achieved significant progress in building public and political awareness of this environmental scandal. Here are some of our highlights:

River Action was the first to expose the intensive poultry industry supply chain and force major producers to admit culpability

We engaged positively with farming and food industry businesses, including Noble Foods, Avara Foods and Tesco, to inform and influence change in industrial practices. This effort has led to Avara Foods, which has 120 supplying farms within the River Wye catchment, admitting culpability for their part in polluting the River Wye.

River Action led a coalition of 20 NGOs from the Wye valley in support of our plan

We led a coalition of 20 NGOs, activists and environmental leaders from the Wye valley to call on Government officials – including then Environment Minister Rebecca Pow – to pursue the implementation of our plan.

River Action raised over £34,000 for Citizen Science projects

Thanks to our supporters, we were delighted to have raised over £34k for the Wye valley’s  citizen scientists. These funds secured the procurement of river pollution testing equipment for hundreds of volunteers across the Wye catchment to gather evidence of agricultural pollution.

We have also been able to fund Radnorshire Wildlife Trust to hire an analyst to collate and analyse the data compiled by various citizen scientist groups across the Wye catchment.

River Action Supported Local Activists

River Action is fast becoming the go-to charity for local activists as we help them mobilise in the most efficient and impactful way.

For the past twelve months we have been supporting Angela Jones, the ‘Wild Woman of the Wye’, on her campaign in raising awareness about the desperate state of the River Wye:

  • We provided Angela with a PR plan to launch her summer 2022 campaign that included press release and social media guidance
  • We provided Angela with legal advice via our partners the Environmental Law Foundation to protect her from potential litigation from polluters that she was openly targeting.
  • We provided Angela with funding to procure creative assets including a giant floating ‘Crappy Egg’ egg carton that was integral to the campaign

What’s next?

Working closely with other NGOs and activists we have achieved significant progress in building public and political awareness of this environmental scandal. But action is still not happening fast enough. And some of the biggest poo-luters are yet to take responsibility. 

With the cause of the problem established, it is now critical that the plan is adopted in full by all those responsible  as a matter of the utmost urgency.  We are continuing to call out those who fail to take action and are campaigning for the implementation of specific solutions that are urgently needed to save this iconic British river from irreparable damage.

New Campaigns Manager joins River Action

We are absolutely delighted to welcome Amy Slack as our Campaigns Manager at River Action.  In our latest blog, we get an insight into her life, interests, and the role that she will play to help rescue Britain’s rivers.

Tell us about yourself…

Hello! I’m Amy! I’m a Bristolian who’s now living in beautiful Cornwall. I’m super lucky to live within walking distance of the ocean. I love to swim in the sea (yes, I’m one of those mad people who will take a plunge in the sea in the depth of winter!). Living in Cornwall it’s obligatory to surf which I do pretty badly but I love it – there is nothing quite like the feeling of catching and riding that perfect wave! My partner Geoff is also in the process of renovating his small 16ft boat which we are hoping we’ll finally get in the water this spring after 2 years of restoration work!, so I’m hoping we’ll be exploring the waterways around Falmouth by boat in 2023! I’m also a super keen cyclist so I can often be found riding around the backroads or on bikepacking adventures.

How did you become interested in ocean/ river protection?

I’ve always been a bit of a waterbaby from holidays in Devon and Cornwall as a child to becoming a sailing instructor in my twenties. I hold the ocean in awe. From the towering underwater kelp forests and carpets of seagrass to the sticky rockpool anemones and glistening blue waves, our watery worlds are inspiringly beautiful. But it’s been blindingly obvious to me all my life that we are fast destroying the natural world around us. Growing up in the 90’s, the impacts of climate change were only just entering public consciousness and the more I learnt and understood what we were doing to our planet, the more I wanted to try and change the direction in which we are headed. I studied my masters degree at the amazing Centre for Alternative Technology with guest lecturers like the inspirational George Monbiot, signed all the petitions I came across, went on massive climate marches in London and donated to charities when I could, all of which fueled my determination to work in the environmental sector. From working for the Isles of Scilly Area of Natural Beauty Team (AONB), local authority recycling and environmental services, independent environment consultancies and environmental NGO’s, my whole working life has been about protecting and restoring our natural world. But it’s seeing the dire state of rivers and oceans around the world that I’ve found so shocking – and this is so often ignored by the mainstream. From plastic pollution smothering shorelines in the Philippines to the brown sewage sludge clogging chalk streams in east England, it’s these experiences that have driven me to campaign for the protection and restoration of rivers and seas.  

You used to work at Surfers Against Sewage as Head of Campaigns & Policy … Tell us about the charity and your work there?

SAS started out in the 90’s as a single issue grassroots campaign group. A small group of surfers in Cornwall were tired of getting sick from sewage when they went surfing. The UK was known as ‘the dirty man of Europe’ with abysmal sewerage infrastructure which meant that sewage was unashamedly being pumped straight into rivers and seas. It was pretty common to encounter ‘floaters’ when heading out for a surf or swim. The original maverick SAS campaigners took to the streets in their wetsuits and gas masks brandishing their surfboards demanding change. They highlighted the shocking state of UK waterways and exposed polluting industries, even becoming shareholders in some water companies at one point to force change from the inside. Their actions contributed to EU legislation that led to huge changes in water treatment and the state of our coastal waterways. 

But now we are facing a second wave of sewage pollution. Over 90% of sewage outflows pump sewage directly into rivers with 86% of rivers failing to meet ‘good ecological status’ and spiraling further and further into decline. And we are still getting just as sick from sewage now as we did in the 90’s. Rivers are the blue arteries of the country feeding directly into the ocean. The health of the ocean depends on healthy rivers. Today, SAS is about more than surfers and more than sewage, campaigning for a thriving ocean and thriving people. But sewage pollution and water quality are a core part of its DNA and the charity continues to be one of the leading voices driving action to clean up rivers and seas.

I’ve had the immense privilege of building and leading the Campaigns & Policy team at SAS for the last four years. I’ve overseen public campaigns and political advocacy on water quality, plastic pollution, ocean & climate and ocean recovery. I’ve organised protests and mass paddle-outs, held plastic polluters to account through the citizen science brand audit, co-ordinated impactful campaign films, led public stunts, directed and written campaign reports (most notably the four annual water quality reports), supported MP’s in drafting legislation and bills, hosted parliamentary events to influence policy, and driven the development of the Safer Seas & Rivers Service for the last four years. I’m particularly proud to have worked with colleagues at other organisations as part of the #EndSewagePollution coalition that has been responsible for driving the huge public, political and media awareness of the sewage pollution scandal over the last year and driving amendments in the Environment Act. It’s been an honor to be able to work with an amazing team to have so much impact, particularly considering it’s still quite a small organisation of around 30 people.

Tell us about your new role as RA campaigns manager.  What can we expect to see from your role in 2023?

I’ve been on the Advisory Board for the last year so have got to know Charles and James well and supported various campaigns so I’m super excited to be joining the River Action team. Our rivers are in such a dire state that we have to act fast if we have any hope of reversing their decline. I’ll be working closely with Charles and James to set out our political advocacy strategy, defining our calls on government and industry, particularly in the run up to the local and general elections. We’ll continue to call out polluters and expose the supply chains complicit in the destruction of rivers. We’ll be digging deep into the specific issues faced at river catchment level and supporting community groups to gather evidence and also hold polluters to account for destruction of local environments. Our campaigns will reflect the urgency in which we need to act and we have ambitious plans. I’ll be looking to grow the campaigns team to help drive our impact so keep your eyes peeled! 

You can expect us to be collaborative, straight talking, audacious and ambitious sprinkled with a little fun and humour.  

In your opinion, what needs to change in order to rescue Britain’s rivers?

I would be lying if I didn’t say that we need a huge amount to change across all parts of society, business and government. But over the last few years, it’s become increasingly apparent that change is driven from grassroots communities. It’s ordinary people doing extraordinary things that’s forcing the government and industry to act to reverse their damaging impact on the environment. We need to empower local communities to enable them to drive change, to feel able to make a difference. When we rise up together we have enormous power and impact. That’s what we hope to support at River Action – to enable and support communities by give people the tools and knowledge they need to create change fast.

New Communications Coordinator joins River Action

Following the news of River Action’s expansion, we are pleased to welcome Molly Allen as our new Communications Coordinator. In our latest blog, we get an insight into her life, interests, and the role that she will play to help rescue Britain’s rivers.

Tell us about yourself…

I have always had a deep fascination with the natural world – especially for the wild and most remote places. I grew up in south Devon, where I spent most of my time feeding this curiosity through literature, art, and watching (many!) wildlife documentaries.  I studied English at the University of Exeter and, during my second year, I was offered a job to work as a guide for an expedition organisation in British Columbia, Canada.  Since then, I have been primarily working in the expedition sector, leading tours and projects across Iceland and western Canada.  

Last year, I moved back to the UK, where I currently split my time between London and Devon. When not inside, you will usually find me trail running, hiking or kayaking (quite badly!). 

How did you become interested in river protection?

I’m fascinated by rivers. They’re dynamic and mysterious, and they’re home to an incredible array of wildlife. 

When first stepping into the environmental sector, I was surprised by how little attention our freshwater environments get compared to other habitats, such as tropical forests or coral reefs.  I think what freshwater conservation needs now is for the level of support to be brought into line with what you’ve got for tigers, pandas, orangutans and all the other species and habitats that get most of the attention, and I believe that River Action will play a key part in this. I am very excited to be part of the team, and I look forward to playing an active part in protecting and restoring our rivers for the benefit of communities and wildlife.

Tell us about your new role as Communications Coordinator

In a nutshell, I am responsible for planning and coordinating the communications of River Action’s campaigns.  It is a varied role, which I love, and it includes responsibilities that range from empowering local communities to protect their rivers to advocating for change in national policy and industry practice.  Our campaigns will reflect the urgency with which we need to act and we have ambitious plans. So watch this space!

In your opinion, what needs to change in order to rescue Britain’s rivers?

Our rivers are arguably our most important natural features. Not only are their fragile ecosystems home to hundreds of species of flora and fauna, but they have also been crucial for the growth of our towns and cities and provide fresh water for drinking and farming.  To put it simply, without our rivers, we simply could not survive.  Yet, the state of our rivers and waterways is disgraceful.  In order to enable change, we need everyone to understand that protecting these freshwater habitats and their wildlife is ultimately in their own interest too.

Furthermore, with regulators for rivers in the UK hugely underfunded and understaffed, citizen science’s roles in local communities are fundamental to our campaigns. They are our ‘eyes on the water’, able to see and report both great and subtle changes to the overall environment.  There is a real need for local communities to hold polluting industries and failed government regulators to account and clean up their mess. We are focusing on empowering local communities by giving them the knowledge and tools that will enable them to collect detailed information about our waterways and drive the change that our rivers so desperately need. 

River Action welcomes new Campaigns Manager

Following the recent news of River Action expansion, we are pleased to welcome onboard our new team member Amy Slack as Campaigns Manager. Amy’s appointment strengthens our team considerably as we endeavour to rescue more rivers.

As Campaigns Manager, Amy will be working closely with James Wallace, CEO, Charles Watson, Founder, and the broader team. Her expertise and experience in campaigning will provide valuable insights as she leads the development and delivery of River Actions campaigns. With Amy’s guidance, we will make greater strides in rescuing more of Britain’s rivers through targeting river polluting industries and increasing pressure on the UK Government.

Amy joins us from Surfers Against Sewage (SAS) where she led the Campaigns & Policy team for four years – working alongside other activists and campaigners. At SAS, Amy played a key and varied role – from exposing the extent of the sewage scandal, holding polluters to account, demanding urgent government action, and leading SAS’s public actions, protests and paddle outs!      

Amy Slack, River Action Campaigns Manager says:

“I’m super excited to be joining the inspiring River Action Team as Campaigns Manager. Having been part of the River Action Advisory Board for the last year, it’s been an honour to have supported the organisation’s growth, providing advice and guidance where I can. Now, I look forward to helping the team to #stopriverpollution for good.”

 

James Wallace, River Action CEO says:

“When we drafted the new Campaigns Manager job description we had one person in mind: Amy Slack. Imagine our surprise when she applied! Just as she has proven with Surfers Against Sewage, Amy will bring unique insight to River Action’s urgent mission, helping ensure that clean rivers are at the top of every politician, voter, business leader and consumer’s priorities. There is nothing more important than water security, and we are blessed to have Amy join our team of positive disruptors.”

 

New CEO joins River Action mission

We recently announced River Action’s expansion plans and appointment of James Wallace, former Chief Executive of the Beaver Trust, as CEO. Here, we get an insight into the life of our new CEO , the future of River Action and how we plan to continue rescuing Britain’s rivers. 

Tell us about your early life…

In 1972, the year of my birth, wildlife was still relatively abundant and our climate was stable, although starting to show signs of a wobble. Butterflies clouded hedgerows, rivers ran clear and full of rising trout, starlings murmurated in their thousands. Supermarkets didn’t exist. Fossil-fuel powered agribusiness was constrained to the USA. 11 million fewer people were crammed on our small islands. Politicians had yet to privatise the water industry, putting profits ahead of people and the planet. Maggie Thatcher hadn’t told us “There’s no such thing as society.”

Right from the womb, I was always dissatisfied with the hierarchical order of things, the learning by rote, the parroting of lies from a dead empire, the “I’m better than you”, the quest for wealth, and the drive for growth in this fragile finite world. I was sent to boarding schools which ruined me, despite my parents good intentions. I didn’t fit in and fought the system, rejecting the “kill it, cut it up and put it under a microscope” reductionistic scientific methodology and the exploit and extract economy. 

Unsurprisingly, I was ejected kicking and screaming from my college without A Levels and told I was beyond help. Armed with a mohican, leathers and screw-you attitude, I polluted my veins with drugs and lived on the streets and lurked in dark corners of crumbling squats. 

Full of self-loathing, convinced that I was the problem, and hatred of this greedy world, I eventually saw that I’m not alone and that something could be done if only I could see the individual wood from the communal trees, and started a journey of recovery, of myself, of communities and of nature.

What have been the highlights of your career so far?

In 1994, I blagged my way on to an Archaeology BSc degree and studied the rise and fall of civilisations – little did I realise how relevant that would be today – and the iniquitous relationship between humans and the rest of nature. An accidental five-year corporate career demonstrated the abject and inherent lack of responsibility of businesses driven by shareholder value, and I left having tried to introduce a neophyte version of CSR in the late 90’s. My suggestions to the senior management team fell on deaf ears so I hit the road to social and environmental enlightenment.

I went back to school in 2002, and fitted in. This time I learned about how the world really works: Schumacher College awarded me a Distinction (now that was a surprise!) in my Masters in Holistic Science having studied with extraordinary teachers like Jane Goodall, James Lovelock, Teddy Goldsmith, Vandana Shiva, and Satish Kumar. So I started on a mission to use natural systems thinking to solve human-made problems. Over the past 20 years, I have helped set up and lead enterprises trying to realign society – which does exist – with the planet that feeds, waters and houses us – which won’t exist for much longer if we don’t stop behaving like a virulent planetary coronavirus. There’s only so much sweating that Gaia will do before we are washed into the plastic- and turd-filled seas.

These start-ups included climate communications (Susten8), renewable energy (Renpro), green regeneration (Ecocities), ecotourism (Canopy & Stars) and cleantech financing (The Research Exchange). Some succeeded, some flopped. More recently, I co-founded a marine exploration charity in 2015 (Nekton Foundation), helped grow a tropical conservation charity (Blue Ventures) and co-founded a river restoration charity (Beaver Trust) in 2019. All the time, coming closer to home, as I realised we spend more time and effort saving snow leopards in the Himalayas than saving wild cats in Britain.

You used to be CEO of the Beaver Trust. Tell us about the charity and the importance of river restoration…

Beavers are ecosystem engineers, with the power to transform whole landscapes from desertified agricultural wastelands into verdant ecological sponges, soaking up and storing floodwaters, releasing them slowly in drought. Their wetlands pack more biodiversity pound per beavery bucked tooth than your average forest and having co-evolved with species like salmon, crested newts, willow tits, barbastelle bats and otters, they are everyone’s friends, including humans, creating habitats and food for thousands of species.

Our agrarian civilisation evolved on the banks of rivers and in the midst of beaver wetlands; we even mimicked their homes made of sticks, stones and mud, and replicated their water managing dams and canals; although to the opposite effect – beavers save water, humans rush it off to the sea, having liberally dosed it with a cocktail of economic effluent.

Beaver Trust has helped ensure the native Eurasian beaver is protected and returning to Britain once again, working with amazing NGOs like the Wildlife Trusts to restore the species and support communities including farmers and anglers to live alongside these dynamic and sometimes challenging neighbours. 

Perhaps our biggest success, was the launch of Woodlands for Water, a £15 million farm payment scheme to incentivise landowners to set aside river buffers, providing space for rivers to breathe life back into the land. We launched it last year with Defra, National Trust, Woodland Trust and Rivers Trust. Although we were the obvious minnows in the pond, we played an essential role in galvanising support, pushing bold targets and ensuring the programme is scalable.

Why do you love rivers and how did you become involved in river protection?

I learned a lot about the challenges facing rivers in our country at Beaver Trust and how to engage otherwise divergent interests in respectful and urgent dialogue to form a consensus on what we can do collectively. Like the blood in my adolescent veins, all our rivers – our life support system – are polluted, some are close to ecological collapse. Water security will be the biggest challenge to our climate-broken communities over coming years and we need to harness natural systems while simultaneously holding to account the polluters, and their crony enablers in government.

Having grown up on the banks of the Rivers Pang and Kennet, two once-idyllic chalk streams, and learned to fly-fish for trout, I have a deeply ingrained affinity with all things wet and wild. I’m the grandson of farmers who tended the land in Herefordshire, Pembrokeshire, Shropshire and further afield in Kenya, Australia and New Zealand. Farming is very much in my blood, and what I see in this dreadful dichotomy between the unbridled industrialised rape of the land and the sensitive agroecological ways of regenerative farming breaks my heart. There is no excuse for the continued rampage on nature under the banner of food security and productivity. It is a lie spun by powerful interests that must be exposed and stopped.

Likewise the defecation in our rivers by privatised water companies – companies owned by foreign investors who have indebted assets and paid out £billions in dividends – is scandalous, and expedited by our national government. This is not accidental. The current libertarian political system is based upon deregulation and low taxes, which not only allows but encourages large agricultural, food and water companies to exploit and pollute with impunity. The likelihood of being detected and prosecuted by our defanged Environment Agency is a business risk so low that it is laughable. Why? Well how would you monitor and police 200,000km of rivers if you had lost 70% of your budget in the past 10 years?

Despite what some will tell you, the writhing death of our rivers lies at the feet of our government and the very political decisions of the HM Treasury.

Tell us about your new role as River Action CEO and what needs to change to save UK rivers?

The move to River Action was organic. I joined our inspiring Founder and Chair, Charles Watson, with a few others in 2021 to help him set up our first campaign on the River Wye and then became a trustee that summer. When we discussed the need to grow River Action and my wish to mobilise all the contacts, goodwill and expertise gathered recently from working in river restoration it was the obvious next step for me. There is nothing more important than water security to me as a father of children inheriting the omnishambles we have created. Everyone may not feel they need beavers in their life, but even billionaires and Prime Ministers – sometimes embodied in the same person – need clean water.

Charles has demonstrated clearly the need for an independent organisation, working for the common good and empowered to engage with all stakeholders with a sense of urgency. By never accepting funding from polluting industries or failing governments we can never be accused of greenwash or prevented from bearing our teeth if needed. 

I am delighted to be working with incredible organisations like the Rivers Trust movement who so ably generate the evidence of pollution, over abstraction and other pressures on rivers and wildlife we need, while restoring habitats with thousands of boots in the water. 

River Action will play a companion role by undertaking some of the things that others may feel somewhat constrained from doing. We are free to campaign vocally to pressure industry to clean up its act and for the Government to be properly funded and resourced. We are free to convene and collaborate, acting as a nimble catalyst unencumbered by bureaucracy and weighty membership, and free to act directly using all means available, including deploying the full weight of the law to force those accountable for the destruction of our rivers to wipe after themselves.

What are the next steps for River Action?

I have drafted with colleagues an ambitious five-year strategy which, we hope, will give our rivers a chance to recover in time. Our approach is systemic, collaborative and locally-led. By developing high-impact campaigns, each one will act as a precedent that can be replicated across the nation and across different polluting industries. For example, by successfully undertaking a judicial review and associated public campaign in one catchment that demonstrates the law has been broken and holds the perpetrators accountable, we will assist other communities to follow suit. Collectively, these actions will pressure change at the nexus of power, by informing elections and encouraging the public to vote with their ecological conscience for river-friendly manifestos. Ultimately, we will see an increase in environmental budgets from the public coffers and our public servants doing their jobs.

Charles and I have spent much of the past few months raising funds, with our first employee Lauren Razek, and spreading the word with the help of Katie Schuster and our partners, Seahorse Environmental. We are now in the position to recruit employees and will soon be announcing key roles. Just as our organisation is a bit maverick and positively disruptive, we will be seeking out talented individuals from all sectors who can bring fresh insight and energy to our national rivers crisis.

Our Advisory Board, with our recently appointed Vice Chair, Feargal Sharkey, will continue to be our guiding lights and inject the wisdom we need to steer our mission forward, and bang the drums of change.

Perhaps most importantly, the communities that we serve will be instrumental in their own success. Our role is to empower local groups with advice, funding and practical solutions like citizen science; to take their evidence and stories and shout them from the rooftops; and then represent their needs to industry and government, advocating for rapid change. The passionate and mobilised people of Britain will be the ones who unleash the help our rivers so desperately need and I look forward to supporting each community in whatever way I can.

It is a privilege to be entrusted with this role and I look forward to working with everyone – from farmers, anglers, conservationists, teachers, swimmers and the media to developers, tourism operators, small businesses, lawyers, policy makers and rappers – to help rescue Britain’s rivers.

 

Check out the recent Insta Live with Marina Gibson in conversation with James Wallace.

Re-watch the Live here

How far will she go to save the Wye? Angela Jones, The Wild Woman of the Wye

 

At River Action, we are lucky to work closely with many other inspiring environmental NGOs, community groups, and individuals in our fight to save our rivers.
In this blog, we talk to Angela Jones, aka, The Wild Woman of the Wye. Angela has a close and passionate connection with the river – describing the Wye as “the arteries that run through my veins”. A day hardly passes when she is not working tirelessly to save the river from the horrendous pollution onslaught it is facing.  

 

Firstly, tell us about yourself and your connection with the River Wye

I have spent the past 30 years of my life at one with nature – day by night – in, on and by the water. While some people might describe me as eccentric, the truth of the matter is that I am happy with the basics of life. In other words, I am not materialistic – I don’t have the internet – which can certainly make running a business challenging! But I am happy with my life, my connection with nature and will not stop fighting to protect it. I spend 5-6 hours on the river every single day. And, through my love for the river, I see myself as its guardian. So I must and will always protect it.

 

How long have you been wild swimming?

I have swum in rivers for decades – and it has become a huge part of my life and who I am. It is interesting that what was once an unusual hobby, has now become a fashionable sport. Many people are now enjoying being out in nature and reaping the many benefits that wild swimming has to offer. 

 

Tell us about your business…

After having often been asked for advice over the years about wild swimming, I decided to set up my business – Angela Jones Swim Wild. Through the business, I share my lifelong passion – taking small groups out on the water and stripping them back to basics. It is truly wonderful to see them light up as they come to connect and lose themselves in nature and find peace in themselves. I am all about caring and sharing – so I also support local charities, and do talks at schools and universities to raise awareness. And, I have also recently written a book about my life, the River Wye and wild swimming – of which proceeds support local charities. 

 

What changes have you seen on the Wye in recent years?

Having spent so many years in and on the river, I have got to know it inside out. That is to say, I know how it tastes, how it looks, what the texture is like. Additionally I have witnessed the beauty of aquatic life above and below the river surface. For example the river bed, the salmon pools, the impressive boulders, and so much more. 

 

I started noticing gradual change roughly ten years ago – but about five years ago, things started getting significantly worse. The river started to taste different and the reflection and clarity changed. It looked muddier and the wildlife started struggling. From where my children and I used to once watch the magical flow of water with the blanket of water-crowfoot and the play of insects in the river – this all disappeared. Then, the rocks and pebbles lost their colour and became coated in a browny-green slime and I couldn’t see to the bottom of the salmon pools or smell their distinct smell. And then the algal blooms appeared and the fish started struggling to get oxygen and breathe.  It broke my heart when this all started happening – as I knew the whole ecosystem was beginning to shut down. 

 

How has river pollution affected wild swimming and your business?

At first I was told to keep quiet about the deterioration of the river – in case it ruined tourism. Now, I have had to adapt.  I have to test every section that I take people swimming in and often have to relocate because of pollution. If this is the case, I take people to a nearby lake where I teach and introduce them to wild swimming and wildlife.

 

In fact, 90% of what I do is for the environment and protecting it. The other 10% is business – taking people swimming, kayaking, etc.

 

On the rare occasions I take my clients to the river, I have to test the pollution levels of the waters before using them. Further, to prevent too much impact on nature, I only take small groups to the river and ask them to not to wear products on their skin which could harm the river. I very much have to gauge my visits to the river on a day by day basis.

 

What needs to change in order to save our UK rivers?

It’s simple, we need change and now! 

  • The increase in poultry farming needs to stop.
  • Fines need to be assigned to those farmers  and water companies causing damage.
  • The Environment Agency needs to do a better job at monitoring pollution and the government needs to take control through legislation and policy.  
  • Farmers need to be encouraged to change their farming practices – such as disposing chicken manure responsibly, rather than dumping it on the fields – from where it just gets washed into the river by rainfall.
  • More transparency and less lying about facts and figures is needed – The Wye is in crisis. 
  • We need to unite and link voices as together, our voices become stronger. 

 

How far will you go to save the river?

I will literally do whatever it takes to stop this beautiful river from dying. For example, I am refusing to pay my water bills until Welsh Water stops discharging raw sewage into the Wye. And, on four occasions now I have had to fight off the debt collection agencies who they have sent to try and enter my property to reclaim payment.

 

What’s next for Angela Jones?

River Action is supporting Angela on her next campaign in raising awareness about the desperate state of the River Wye. Watch out for her swimming down a river near you towing a large eggbox and toilet in protest of the environmental devastation caused by the intensive poultry business and water companies that continue to pollute our rivers….

River Action raises over £50k for creative campaign

Our latest fundraising efforts have come to an end and with your support – and that of the matchfinding from our generous donor – we have smashed our target!

 

Total raised by our recent Crowfunder campaign is over £50k!

 

We launched this fundraiser for Earth Day 2022 – a day to ‘invest in our planet’. So, all funds raised will go towards developing our future creative campaigns to put pressure on the government and regulators to protect our rivers from the pollution caused by profit-focussed corporations and widespread agricultural malpractice. 

We are hugely grateful to all our supporters for getting us beyond our target. Thank you for your support!

Charles Watson, Founder and Chairman of River Action said:

We are looking forward to working on and launching our creative campaign to apply the necessary pressure on the government and bring greater public attention to the reality behind our disastrously polluted rivers – and what action is needed to save them. The truth of the matter is that the government is simply not doing enough – and this has to change.”

 

Watch this space for further news and updates…
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