UK Youth for Nature writes for River Action on the problems facing our rivers and what can be done to save them…

It is the young people of today who are demanding greater action from governments to fight climate change and tackle environmental issues. Engaging youth in environmental protection not only creates direct impact on changing youth behaviours and attitudes but can influence country-wide change. UK Youth for Nature is the UK’s leading youth-led network calling on politicians and governments of the UK to take urgent action and tackle the loss of nature. Jazz Ghataora, a PhD student at the University of Bath is investigating methods to monitor and remove heavy metal pollutants from rivers and lakes.

Jazz has written for the River Action blog about the problems facing our rivers and what UK Youth for Nature is doing in 2021 to help save them!…

Rivers are an integral part of the UK landscape, with water systems offering refuge for countless UK residents as well as many of our beloved wildlife species, including kingfishers, otters and salmon. However, the health of many beloved rivers which were once a source of natural beauty is declining at an alarming rate because of pollution from variety of anthropogenic activities.

Given the nature of a variety of chemical pollutants, many of them persist in the environment for considerable amounts of time. Endocrine disruptors and even toxic heavy metals have the potential to wreak havoc on human health for decades if matters are not addressed.

“Clearly not enough is being done at an effective rate by both government and local water suppliers to mitigate these issues”.

Despite the introduction of the 2014 UK Water Act and river clean up initiatives to remediate rivers such as the metal-polluted River Nent, there is not enough action to prevent this pressing environmental crisis. This is exemplified in a 2017 study by the World Wildlife Fund which identified that over 80% of UK rivers had substandard ecological status and are ravaged by direct pollution from sewage release. The extent of this gradual decline of UK river quality over time was then further illustrated by a September 2020 report by the Guardian which subsequently revealed that no English river has achieved a good chemical status.

Clearly not enough is being done at an effective rate by both government and local water suppliers to mitigate these issues. The lack of political will power and cuts to environmental agency budgets are just a few examples of the neglect at the governmental level.

This year, UK Youth for Nature has been running its #DeadInTheWater campaign. We are aiming to raise awareness and to apply direct pressure on the governments of the UK to invest in better sewage infrastructure, properly enforce regulation against polluters, tackle pollution at source, particularly from water companies and intensive agriculture such as industrial poultry sheds and seek nature-based solutions in order to rectify this urgent environmental crisis.

By combining our voices and continuing to raise awareness, the natural beauty of the UK rivers, lakes and streams may once again become a familiar setting, providing refuge for local residents and encouraging natural wildlife to thrive in generations to come.

For more information about UKYFN, head to https://youthfornature.uk/to help support these campaigns and join our team.

We fully support the campaign work and aims of River Action UK.

Watch the UK Youth For Nature Dead in the water campaign video here.

Read the WWF report of UK river pollution by sewage here.

Writing to your representatives to ask them to support action on the river pollution crisis

If you were moved by the issues raised in the Rivercide documentary, or through River Action’s campaigns, please consider writing to your parliamentary representative to express your support and call on them to take action.

Please note that environmental protection is a devolved issue so if you live in England you should write to your local constituency MP and if you live in Wales, you should write to your Senedd Constituency Member.

Please find template letters below: 

England – template letter

You can find your MP and their contact details here. Please do consider personalising this template letter if you can, as that may have greater impact.

Dear …

I am writing to you as one of your constituents to urge you to stand up for our rivers in Parliament.

The state of our rivers is a crisis which can no longer be ignored. Every single river in England is now polluted beyond legal limits by human, agricultural and industrial waste.

In 2020 alone, water companies released untreated human sewage into our waterways on more than 400,000 occasions.

[Please do consider adding a local example or your own experience here]

A key part of the problem is the inability of our underfunded regulatory agencies to enforce standards and penalise polluters.

With government funding to England’s Environment Agency falling by more than 70% in the past decade, water quality monitoring has been slashed, each farm can now expect to be inspected just once every 263 years, and prosecutions of businesses for polluting rivers have fallen by 88% in the last decade.

As the UK prepares to host the global COP26 climate conference, its time for the government to tackle this vast environmental and public health threat on our doorstep.

I support River Action’s call for the Government to double the Environment Agency’s environmental protection budget so that it is properly equipped to tackle the river pollution crisis and am writing to ask you to do the same.

Kind regards

…. [Add your name and address so that your MP is able to verify you are a constituent]

 

Wales – template letter

You can find your constituency’s Senedd Member and their contact details here. Please do consider personalising this template letter if you can, as that may have greater impact.

Dear …

I am writing to you as one of your constituents to urge you to stand up for our rivers in the Senedd.

The state of our rivers is a crisis which can no longer be ignored. Widespread leakage and dumping of agricultural, industrial and human waste mean that 56% of rivers in Wales now fail to meet ‘good ecological status’ and over 60% of our protected rivers exceed phosphate pollution limits.

In 2020 alone, water companies released untreated human sewage into our waterways on more than 100,000 occasions from more than 2000 different sewage plants across the country.

[Please do consider adding a local example or your own experience here]

A key part of the problem is the inability of our underfunded regulatory agencies to enforce standards and penalise polluters: Natural Resources Wales has repeatedly had its budget cut and has warned the Welsh Government on numerous occasions that these cuts risk leaving it unable to deliver on demand for its services.

As the Senedd declares a nature emergency in Wales, it is time to prioritise tackling this vast environmental and public health threat on our doorstep.

I support River Action’s call for Welsh Government to double Natural Resources Wales’s environmental protection budget so that it is properly equipped to tackle the river pollution crisis and am writing to ask you to do the same.

Kind regards

…. [Add your name and address so that your Senedd Member is able to verify you are a constituent]

We are stepping up our #GiveUsBackOurRivers campaign…

Our petition calling on government to properly fund environmental protection is rapidly building momentum. Thank you for helping us to exceed 35,000 signatures in our first week. We are fast approaching 40,000.

We know we cannot wait any longer, many of our rivers could soon be ecologically dead. Therefore, we are amplifying our message through the launch of a new ad campaign…

Please share these ads to your social media profiles and encourage your friends and family to participate as well.

The ads will be shared on River Action’s social media platforms and website over the coming 6 weeks.

Follow us to be notified when we release a new one! Twitter, Facebook and Instagram

And don’t forget to sign the petition !

Read this week’s article in the Daily Express on River Action’s ad campaign here.

Watch ITV’s report on the campaign here. 

Herefordshire’s council members unite in plea to MP George Eustice to save the Wye as algal blooms that wiped out miles of the River Wye’s ecology in 2020 return…

Desperate plea for help to Central Government to save one of Britain’s most-loved rivers  reveals that the County of Hereford only has 0.8 full time Environment Agency officer to combat the severe agricultural pollution of the Wye

In a devastating letter to George Eustice – the Secretary of State for the Environment and Rural Affairs – Herefordshire Council have raised alarm about the impact Intensive Poultry Units (IPUs) are having on the river Wye’s ecological status. The letter has been prompted in part by a moratorium imposed by Natural England on building in the Wye catchment on all new developments that cannot prove they are phosphate neutral. The moratorium was imposed due to the deteriorating state of the river and the requirements are such that developers cannot meet them, therefore no new building has been approved. The impact of this decision on local communities and their economies has been significant.

Councillors believe that the moratorium on building is futile given the contribution to river pollution of new house building is minute (less than 1%) compared to that of phosphate run-off from agriculture.

In fact, as the letter highlights it is agricultural practices, not building developments, that led to the river being described last year by the Daily Mail as “a putrid algae-ridden swamp”.  Around 70 miles of river lost the protected plant water crowfoot (Ranunculus) due to algal blooms and therefore fish and invertebrate life were impacted as river keepers reported widespread loss of cygnets from starvation. The letter explains that this environmental calamity is a direct result of the now very high number of a new IPUs in this valley.

A recent study on the impact of these IPUs by the Universities of Lancaster and Leeds has estimated an excess loading of 2000 tonnes of phosphate per annum in the catchment. That is equivalent to 1.5m tonnes of farmyard manure being spread, over and above the crop requirements every year – an incredibly high number.

To date, Herefordshire has so far received no support from Government to deal with the problem. Described as an “unprecedented disaster” occurring in the Wye, Council members through this letter have escalated matters and called on government to take immediate action – with an initial ask of at least £3.9m to begin to tackle the problem.

With the funding, the councillors have called for the speedy delivery of phosphate reduction measure including reduced fertiliser spreading, reduced pathways for run off, increased soil structure and organic materials and increased field margins. Critically they also highlight the need for increased and more effective monitoring, noting “Without a shadow of a doubt, we need a sturdy regulatory floor with a full commitment to enforcing existing regulations to achieve bringing the watercourse back into compliance”.

Currently, the Environment Agency has only 4 officers to do all regulatory work across the whole of the West Midlands, which equates to 0.8 of an officer for Herefordshire.

We hope that this letter will prompt decisive action at the highest level of government and result in additional emergency funding for agencies to ensure improved monitoring and enforcement along both sides of the border.  River Action will be monitoring the response and outcome closely.

River Action campaign group launches public petition calling for urgent action from governments on river pollution crisis

  • River Action issues call for a doubling of budgets to address collapsing environmental protection in England and Wales and tackle the escalating river pollution crisis.
  • Campaign launch follows revelation that England’s Environment Agency had total budget in 2019/2020 of just £0.32 million to inspect over 120,000 farms, equating to just 0.65 staff in each of the country’s 14 areas.
  • With every river in England now polluted beyond legal limits, the group calls on the UK and Welsh Governments ahead of COP26 to tackle the “ecological and public health crisis on our doorstep”.

3rd June 2021: Campaign group River Action today announces a new campaign to address the declining state of our rivers amidst a dramatic weakening and de-funding of the regulatory agencies tasked with protecting them. The group has launched a public petition calling on the UK and Welsh Governments to double immediately the environmental protection budgets allocated to their respective regulatory agencies, the Environment Agency and Natural Resources Wales, in order to tackle the escalating river pollution crisis.

The petition highlights that “agricultural pollution of rivers is rampant with farms almost never inspected, water quality rarely tested and water companies pumping raw sewage into rivers with impunity”. Recent data shows that every single English river is now polluted beyond legal limits by human, agricultural and industrial waste. Meanwhile, in Wales, 56% of rivers fail to meet ‘good ecological status’ and agricultural pollution incidents have averaged three per week for the past three years.

The petition attributes much of this crisis to the complete collapse of environmental protection across England and Wales as regulatory agencies have had their funding, staffing and resources cut, noting that “in summary, polluters can dump waste in rivers secure in the knowledge that they will be neither monitored, inspected nor prosecuted.”

In response to a Freedom of Information request, the Environment Agency revealed that its ‘Environment and Business’ budget which covers activities including agricultural regulations, waste crime and incident response fell from £117 million in 2010/11 to £40 million in 2020/21. Welsh equivalent Natural Resources Wales has likewise suffered harsh de-funding since its 2013 creation. These cuts have impacted activities to the extent, for example, that each farm in England can now expect just one inspection every 263 years. Indeed, a Freedom of Information request to the Environment Agency revealed that the 14 Area teams across England received a combined total of just £0.32 million from the overall Environment and Business Budget for agricultural enforcement in 2019/2020, equating to about 0.65 Full Time Equivalent (FTE) staff per Area to enforce these regulations.

Similarly, in England, court actions against river polluters fell from 235 in 2002 to just 3 last year; in Wales, there were prosecutions or civil sanctions for less than 1% of pollution incidents reported from 2013-2016.

George Monbiot, River Action Advisory Board member said: “Environmental protection is a devolved matter, but the same bleak picture emerges across both England and Wales: with environmental regulators dramatically weakened and defunded, and frontline staff numbers shockingly low, polluters are acting with impunity and the state of our rivers is declining drastically in front of our eyes. This is an ecological and public health crisis right on our doorstep and action is long overdue.”

In this context, River Action’s new campaign calls for immediate restoration of environmental protection budgets in both England and Wales in order to reinstate monitoring, compliance and enforcement capabilities. The group estimates the total cost per year to be in the region of £60 million[1], which it highlights is equivalent to “the cost of a quarter of a kilometre of HS2”.

This petition marks the launch of River Action’s second public campaign: the group is also campaigning for action from the intensive poultry industry in the River Wye catchment, notably the UK’s largest egg producer Noble Foods, to take urgent action to mitigate the pollution of that river resulting from their owned intensive poultry units and supply chains.

Charles Watson, founder and chair of River Action said: “Having watched the decline in the ecological state of iconic rivers such as the Wye with growing horror, we continue apply pressure on those companies making vast profits from polluting activities to take responsibility for their actions and clean up their acts. However, it is clear that as long as environmental regulators are not able to effectively monitor and protect our rivers, polluters will continue to dodge accountability, secure in the knowledge that they are highly unlikely ever to have to pay. Our rivers are dying. This is an urgent call to action for everyone who loves swimming in, fishing on, paddling down – or just walking alongside our rivers to get behind this campaign and demand action before it’s too late.”

Ruth Chambers, River Action Advisory Board member said: “While the UK seeks to demonstrate global environmental leadership by hosting the COP26 climate conference, we need to see urgent action on our own doorstep to tackle environmental crises like river pollution. People across England and Wales are demanding that their governments act now to protect rivers from being treated like sewers and rubbish dumps.”

Contact: For all press and media inquiries, please contact Amy Hammond at Seahorse Environmental – ahammond@seahorseenvironmental.co.uk.

Download the full release here.

-ENDS-

[1]Please note that this figure is based on the combination of information obtained through responses to Freedom of Information requests and River Action’s interpretation of publicly disclosed information from the EA and NRW. The figure comprises an informed best estimate of the combined EA and NRW 2020/21 environmental protection budgets and will be clarified further in due course on receipt of outstanding FOI requests. This campaign calls for a doubling of these current environmental protection budgets in order to restore capacity to pre-cut levels of 8-10 years ago, when data demonstrates monitoring and enforcement activity was significantly more effective (see, for example, Salmon and Trout Conservation’s recent report here) than its current levels.

ENDS report: Environmental groups welcome the creation of River Action

The UK’s leading environmental publication – the ENDS report – has covered our campaign to fight the desperate ecological state of the River Wye…

River Action is continuing to call on the UK’s largest egg producer Noble Foods to take immediate action to address the significant environmental degradation caused to the River Wye by the intensive poultry industry in the area.

In the publication’s latest article on River Action, Will Crisp speaks with leading environmental groups and conservationists who have reportedly welcomed the creation of the group – including Stuart Singleton-White, Head of Campaigns at the Angling Trust and Rhiannon Niven, a senior policy advisor at RSPB.

In a statement, Noble Foods said “protecting the environment is extremely important” for the company. However, just a week prior to the article, they published their Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) report where there is not one mention of the run-off of chicken manure into the Wye – the number one environmental issue facing the company.  

River Action’s chairman Charles Watson states “it appears that regulators have almost given up on trying to curtail the damage being done by the poultry farms in this area.

“As things stand, large agribusinesses play a critical role in the supply chain. They have immense power over the smaller companies that they deal with and that is why we are targeting them first.”

Read the full article here.

Seaspiracy: Experts call salmon farming “biological nonsense”

 

Those of you who have watched Seaspiracy will likely still be reeling. If you haven’t, we guarantee you will be after intrepid activist Ali Tabrizi has taken you on his 90-minute whistle-stop tour of our oceans.

The documentary moves from plastic pollution plaguing beaches in the UK to Taiji in Japan, where swathes of dolphins and whales are being slaughtered annually. It connects outbreaks of Ebola to the trawlers plundering fish populations off the coast of West Africa; Somali piracy to commercial fishing in the Gulf of Aden; and exposes a perilous side of shrimp fishing in Thailand. Above all, it reveals the alarming global corruption that is allowing the commercial fishing industry to go unchecked.

Particularly damning is the documentary’s uncovering of the fish farming industry. Aquaculture is often touted as an eco-friendly way to feed the world, however, Seaspiracy tells another story, a story where fish farming is simply “wild fishing in disguise”.

The fish industry claims that for 1kg of farmed salmon only 1.2kg of feed is needed. However, according to Tabrizi’s investigations, there are significantly more fish going into the farms as feed, then will ever come out as food. The documenters travel to Scotland – one of the world’s leading producers of farmed salmon. Here they chronicle horrific sea lice infestations, a common reality of fish farming across the world, and highlight the staggering chemical and organic waste from these farms being pumped into rivers and oceans. Corin Smith, an industry whistle-blower and founder of Inside Scottish Salmon Feedlots, estimates that each farm produces organic waste equivalent to a town of 10,000 to 20,000 people.

Most alarmingly, the film estimates that we eat 2.7 trillion fish a year, that’s 5 million fish a minute, with around 50% of the world’s seafood coming from these farms.

This is all far cry from the sustainable food source fish farming is publicly promulgated as. A point reiterated by Sea Shepherd’s CEO and founder Captain Paul Watson when he notes “everything is now ‘sustainable’. It’s not sustainable – it’s just a marketing phrase, that’s all”.

It is hard not to be shocked at how multi-billion-dollar companies are controlling the global narrative on fish farms. Perhaps this is one of the key lessons from Seaspiracy, that things may not all be as they appear on the tin.

 

River Action: In conversation with 3 Wyes Women…

Women around the world are changing the trajectory of environmentalism and conservation. Our planet is on a precipice and women are rising to meet global environmental challenges through collaboration and courage. While women bear an outsized burden of the climate crisis, recent research has shown that conservation projects achieve better results when they involved women in decision-making.

To mark International Women’s Day 2021, River Action spoke with three women who are leading the fight against river pollution in the Wye Valley. The birthplace of British tourism in the 18th Century – the Wye is heralded as the country’s most beautiful river. Last year, these women kayaked and walked the length of the river and chronicled their trip on social media. However, this was no ordinary sight-seeing excursion, their mission was instead to catalogue the death of Britain’s most beloved river.

They told us about their trip, their triumphs and challenges and their calls to action.

#3 Wyes Women…

 

 

When Morgan Schofield (left), Patricia Ronan (centre), and Jennie Hewitt (right) set off down the Wye in August 2020, they could not have known that their trip had initiated a sequence of events which would lead to the launch of River Action last month.

It was with great excitement that I got to meet the women behind this very catchy twitter hashtag. Apart from gender, there was one other thing that united them. A love of Herefordshire and, in particular, the River Wye.

“It means something different to us all” says Morgan. Morgan was born and raised on the Wye. She loves the river and has always been active in environmental causes. After some 10 years travelling to the far reaches of the globe, during which time she obtained an Environmental Science degree from The Open University, she returned home and tells me, “I never thought I’d say this, but I was so glad to be back”. Now working for Pedicargo, an innovative trade recycling start-up, Morgan explains that experience of kayaking the river was something she will never forget.  “I met Patricia when I had returned in 2018, she was part of the “Wye Ruin It” campaign to stop the Hereford bypass”.

Dr Patricia Ronan is originally from Wexford in Ireland, she has lived in London and many of the Home Counties and, like Morgan, has travelled all over the UK and the globe. She now lives on the river in Hereford. Patricia tells me she has many strings to her bow. This seems not to be an overstatement. A senior lecturer at London South Bank University, Patricia did a PhD focused on acupuncture for schizophrenia, she has researched, taught and worked in many areas, most recently on the impact of Tai Chi on patients with cystic fibrosis. “My knowledge is very far from conservation” says Patricia. I ask what environmental campaigns she has been engaged in before and she tells me, “I have been busy, so I haven’t really been able to do much. You work for a living, you rear a child, you are studying… you try to get a night’s sleep occasionally, you try!”.

This doesn’t seem to do her environmental work enough justice. I am told she was not just involved in but in fact spearheaded the successful local campaign to fight the Hereford Bypass. And, on a personal level, she tells me of her ongoing battles in day-to-day life, be it with the lack of bike racks at her local B&Q or, before the charge for plastic bags was introduced, challenging the Tesco’s check out staff when they offer her a plastic bag. “I tell them off, every time. They shouldn’t be offering these bags out – why aren’t they asking customers where their own bags are and castigating them for using so much plastic – it’s crazy!”

With the Wye running through her ward, Councillor Jennie Hewitt is endeavouring to combat river pollution. This has become a central part of her role. For Jennie, who has always cared about the environment, the threat to the Wye coincided with the beginning of her term as a local councillor.

“The environment we are living in is beautiful, yet underneath we know there exists a deadly threat of soils overburdened with phosphates and other damaging nutrients” she says. Jennie is part of Herefordshire Independents/Coalition and her ward is Golden Valley North where she has lived for over 30 years and taught art for many of them. Like Patricia and Morgan, she was concerned about the environmental damage the Hereford bypass would create. Her slogan is “don’t expect to see a change if you don’t make one”.

When we spoke, Jennie was busy preparing for a Hereford council meeting to support fellow councillor Toni Fagan in bringing a motion asking the executive to lobby 2 local MPs to better resource the county so it can deal with the problems related to climate change and managing the pollution caused principally by agricultural runoff. “We have a disaster going on in Hereford, it is a biological disaster, an ecological disaster and also an economical disaster – we have a moratorium on new building in the Lugg catchment because the lower part of the Wye is failing due to phosphate pollution”. She adds, “part of the reason I was elected, was my focus on the environment. Herefordians are devastated to see their beautiful river and its biodiversity under threat”.

When Patricia and Morgan asked Jennie if she wanted to join them on their trip down the Wye– it was her suggestion that it was turned into a campaign. “I said we should catalogue what has happened to the banks, the erosion, the impact of flooding and importantly, begin to understand what species are now actually left in the Wye catchment”.

Patricia, Morgan and Jennie are all grieving the river’s depleted ecosystem. Morgan explains that despite ostensible differences in their areas of work and age “the shared feeling is that we could see the Wye dying in front of us and we all cared about it”.

The death of the Wye…

“The river is dead” are the exact words Patricia uttered to her husband one morning last summer. “I swim the river most days in the summer, and one morning I noticed how clear the water was, like what you’d run out of the tap in the kitchen. No insects, not one! I swam around a kilometre down the river and saw no sign of life”. We now know the lifelessness Patricia reports was likely to be the result of a pollution spill at Afon Llynfi, a Wye tributary. To date, nobody has been held to account for this incident.

Their account of the river’s degradation continue. Morgan’s degree has given her a scientific understanding of the environmental deterioration.

“Again, and again, we documented cattle in the river, this is really bad! Cows should not have direct access to waterways to help minimise the amount of effluent being added to the river. Additionally, large, heavy animals can compact soils, squashing air pores out. When it rains – water, and whatever chemicals have been sprayed on the soil, run straight into the river, rather than being absorbed into the soil” she says. “On our journey we continued to see many worrying things that are adversely effecting the health of the river. Along huge stretches of the Wye we saw banks completely scoured of trees and plants. Vegetations stabilises the banks, helping to protect against flooding, soil erosion, slows the flow of surface run off, provides vital habitats for a variety of insects and animals and helps keep the water cool among others. It is all extremely worrying – if it continues the way it is, I am left with little doubt that we are going to see a loss of biodiversity along the river”.

The highway to nowhere…

When they set off in late August, the UK’s lockdown had eased, meaning there were plenty of visitors along their route.

“They should be standing there fighting off midges. It is beautiful! But what people don’t understand is the amount of wildlife that is missing. We have already lost a high percentage of birds and insects. If you speak to people locally, they will tell you about how drastically the bird population has declined. The river shouldn’t look like a swimming pool. These visitors think it is correct and perfect, it is not correct. It really shouldn’t be like this” says Patricia, who is a keen angler.

She continues…  “And there aren’t any fish! The salmon are not there anymore. There used to be a lot of salmon caught in the Wye. Estimations suggested there were 6-10,000 salmon a year. Now, you get around 300 salmon out of the river. It’s nuts! We kayaked through the main salmon fishing section in the lower course of the Wye during peak season in September and there were barely any anglers there at all and a lot of them there were struggling. If this river was in good condition – those anglers should have been shoulder to shoulder with their arms hanging off them from bringing salmon in. We were kayaking for 10-20 miles a day and we saw a handful of anglers. What does that tell you? If something isn’t done, we really are on the highway to nowhere”.

Jennie continues this tale of devastation. “One morning, we met a group of women who were walking. They told us that they had been walking the Wye and were part of a group of residents who feed the swans in Fownhope.  Since the algal bloom and the death of the water crowfoot, the swans were starving as it had killed off their source of food and almost all the cygnets had died. In fact, we saw barely any cygnets on our whole trip down the river and just two or three families with surviving cygnets.” Jennie explains to me that, with the death of the water-crowfoot along the river, cygnets, who feed on the weed and are held in its matt of vegetation from being dragged off downstream and being not yet strong enough to climb the banks like their parents, had no food and therefore starved.

What can be done…

All three women believe raising awareness is an important first step. “Our campaign definitely did highlight agricultural pollution issues. In fact, there are two different agricultural planning applications which have been stopped in the last few months, which I believe in former years would have gone through. Powys now is also actually starting to stop things going through and acknowledge there is a problem with the river” says Patricia.

Jennie believes that the agencies must step up to do something about the nutrients in the river. “We need a buffer zone along the river to stop livestock grazing, that would be a start. The Environment Agency recently applied to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) for 100 more personnel in order to help enforcement and to monitor what’s going happening on the ground. They refused. The work can’t be done unless the resource is there!”

For Morgan, improved monitoring and enforcement is a necessity.  “More action and less finger pointing please! We need a more joined up approach – the regional councils and the Environmental Agency must work together to clear this up, we need quicker responses and penalties for pollution incidences”.

Jennie adds “I think accountability and blame need to be separated. The reason why farmers get tempted into intensive livestock units is because they are struggling with insecure economic futures. It’s difficult. As an interim measure there needs to be regulation around these units to ensure attenuation and proper run off. In my ward there is a fantastic planning application, for an attenuation pond on a big farm(not an intensive livestock unit), and the pond will sit at the confluence of the River Dore and the Pont y Weston. It will act as a filtration system and as part of a nature recovery network to encourage biodiversity. This attenuation pond has been devised for the local farm by the Wye and Usk FoundationIt just proves, we have the expertise, people who know what they are doing, farmers who want to do the right thing and the political will in the local Council to support them – we just need the funding! That’s what elected members will be calling for”.

Patricia agrees about not attributing blame to the farmers. She says many would love to farm in an environmentally friendly way, however, most say it is not financially viable. “I have spoken to many who have told me if the government supported them for 3 – 5 years to change farming methods, they would absolutely do it. There needs to be a major piece of government support to say – right you lot, we will help you to bridge that gap in income for the next 3 years while you switch your farming methods so that our soils are not washing into the rivers” says Patricia.

The role of women…

“The vast majority of people I meet through my environmental campaigning and volunteer work are women” Morgan says. “Historically women were the carers of the earth and the natural environment. Being involved in all this conservation work voluntarily and realising that it is women doing most of it – makes me want to preserve the natural, selfless nurturing traits that I think we should celebrate as womenkind. These should be encouraged and awarded”. She adds “it makes me angry at how sexism is still prevalent, we go through our lives without realising it, I am angry that the natural nurturing rights are being taken away. Women have a strong role to play in conservation – in fact, I think we are possibly the future for it.”

Patricia, who is saddened, that we still have such a thing as International Women’s Day tells me “the truth is that most of the decision to pollute or not to pollute are made by men: men are the majority in government, in public service leadership, in big company leadership and in farming.   However, this does not mean that it would be any better if women were in charge. For example, the president of the National Farmers’ Union (NFU) is a woman and they have led a campaign to reintroduce neonicotinoids for farming”.

Like Morgan she has noticed that women are leading the push for changes in environmental campaigning. “Women are in the majority of any groups I have seen locally certainly. Whilst they often push men into leadership roles (and this really needs to stop) it is the women who research and communicate and challenge relentlessly. It is the women who find the funding, organise the events and generate public awareness, much more so than men. Of course, there are some fantastic men who also do this. Women need to step forward more and more, take those leadership roles and really support each other. There are far too many bullies who use dreadful techniques to persuade the public that it is fine to carry on polluting when their real motive is profit. This is wrong” says Patricia.

What’s next for the 3 Wyes Women…

“Watch this space…” says Morgan. The trio agree they will be doing something as summer comes.

Jennie would love to take the trip again this year, “we need to see what has changed” adding, “this year of course, we will be sitting and watching and wondering, when the time of year comes again – will any of the weed or flowers have survived, will they appear? I think about the missing flowers all the time. There are two things that cross my mind. They will be like stars that fell from heaven if we do see them again, it makes me want to cry – the prospect of their return. On the other hand, if they do come back, people might turn around and say “we can do anything, the river can take it”. It’s a double edge sword”.

It is hard not to feel a sense of dread about the prospect of Jennie, Morgan and Patricia travelling the Wye again this summer. What if the flowers haven’t returned, what if there are no swans and what if there are even fewer fish?

Jennie, Morgan and Patricia’s trip down the Wye and their accompanying social media campaigning chronicling what they saw was followed closely by Charles Watson, River Action’s chairman. It was their tales of degradation that prompted Charles to launch River Action in February 2021. Our first campaign focused on the egg production industry in the River Wye catchment where growing evidence has suggested that a significant cause for environmental decline is the nutrient-rich run off of chicken excrement.

 

This article was written by Emma Hooper, River Action’s Campaigns Manager. 

 

River Action pledges its support for The Angling Trust’s Anglers Against Pollution campaign…

River Action pledges its support for The Angling Trust’s Anglers Against Pollution campaign…

At River Action we urge our supporters and friends to sign the Angling Trust’s Petition here as part of our unequivocal endorsement of the Anglers Against Pollution campaign.

It is estimated that freshwater anglers contribute an estimated £1.5 billion annually to the English economy, supporting up to 27,000 full-time equivalent jobs. A clean environment and un-polluted waters are essential for anglers. However, the UK’s waterways are in a sorry state, which is having a direct impact on the sport, with many anglers reporting significant environmental deterioration and devastating fish declines from pollution.

River pollution occurrences can obliterate fish stocks and remediation efforts to restore rivers can often take many years. Here are just a few examples of the horrific regular instances of this happening:

Wales Online, September 2020: Thousands of fish wiped out by pollution that has devastated River Llynfi

Devon Live, May 2020: Hundreds of fish killed in major pollution incident in East Devon

Wales Online, September 2019: The disgusting scale of man made pollution killing Wales’ rivers

Most alarmingly, many serious pollution incidents are not being adequately investigated or prosecuted. In February, the Guardian reported that the Environment Agency has documented 243 violations of the ‘farming rules for water’ since they came into effect in April 2018, however none of these violations have been prosecuted or fined.

The Angling Trust has been campaigning for cleaner waterways since 1948. The organisation has been doing essential work to raise awareness as to why clean rivers are so important. Through its campaign, Anglers Against Pollution, it seeks to give anglers a voice in the fight for a better future for our environment by holding the Government to account for its promises, its actions and its responsibilities.

“Avoidable pollution from careless agricultural practices or sewage discharges is damaging every river in the UK. Anglers are often the first to witness its devastating effects. Through the Anglers Against Pollution campaign The Angling Trust has launched a brilliant initiative to hold government to account on this critical issue. We look forward to working closely with them in this war to save our rivers” said River Action’s Chairman, Charles Watson.

River Action launched in February 2021 to apply direct pressure on the food industry and other polluters to take responsibility for the environmental integrity of their industrial processes and that of their various supply chains. Partnership and collaboration are essential to achieving climate and environmental targets. Please get in touch if you or your organisation would like to partner with us in our work to save the UK’s rivers.

Revealed: no penalties issued under ‘useless’ English farm pollution laws

No penalties issued under “useless” English farm pollution laws

Last week, the Guardian reported that campaigners have called legislation designed to reduce water pollution caused by agriculture in England “useless” as data reveals there have been no prosecutions or fines issued despite 243 documented violations since 2018.

Details of the Farming Rules for Water from April 2018 can be found here.

The rules were implemented to combat agricultural pollution. According to research, runoff from agriculture is the biggest single polluter of rivers, responsible for 40% of damage to waterways.

The Environment Agency said in a statement that while there had been no fines issued under the farming rules for water legislation and no prosecutions had taken place, its records showed that 14 warning letters had been issued.

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