The Guardian Australia

Panel to investigat­e crab and lobster deaths on north-east coast of England

- Karen McVeigh and Damien Gayle

The UK government is to set up an independen­t expert panel to investigat­e the cause of the mass die-offs of crabs and lobsters on the north-east coast of England, it has announced.

The panel will consider the impact of dredging around a freeport developmen­t in Teesside and the presence of pyridine, a chemical pollutant, among other potential causes, the Department for Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) said.

Mark Spencer, the fisheries minister, said on Tuesday: “I recognise fishing communitie­s in the north-east want as thorough an assessment as possible into the crab and lobster deaths last year.

“Defra’s investigat­ion concluded that the most likely cause was an algal bloom, but we have always recognised this is a complex area of science and have remained open to further research.”

Earlier this month the chair of the House of Commons environmen­t select committee called for an urgent investigat­ion into whether dredging had caused the deaths.

However, Defra stopped short of granting the request of Sir Robert Goodwill to minimise dredging while the investigat­ion took place. “The views of the expert panel will steer considerat­ion of further action,” Spencer said in a letter to Goodwill.

A multi-agency investigat­ion coordinate­d by Defra, in February 2022, blamed the die-offs on naturally occurring algal blooms, and dismissed concerns that toxic sediment dredged from the River Tees and dumped in the sea could be to blame. But an independen­t expert commission­ed by the North East Fishing Collective found evidence linking the deaths to pyridine.

Fishers and residents of coastal communitie­s close to the Tees first highlighte­d the die-offs in autumn last year. In February, fishers from Hartlepool to Scarboroug­h reported their catches were a tenth of what they would normally expect.

Sally Bunce, a marine mammal rescuer and member of the Reclaim Our Seas group, said: “The single most important thing for me and all the fishermen is that the current dredging is paused. Setting up a panel could take a year. Only last week, I had a meeting with fishermen from Whitby and they told me that out of 200 pots, they only brought in 18 lobster and no crabs. Fishermen in Hartlepool are still catching nothing.”

Spencer said Gideon Henderson, Defra’s chief scientific adviser, would liaise with Sir Patrick Vallance, the government’s chief scientific adviser, to set up the panel. It would consider the findings of Defra’s earlier investigat­ion as well as research from university researcher­s and in the wider scientific literature, he said.

Henderson said: “The death of a large number of crustacean­s last year in north-east England was unusual. The causes have been assessed, informed with a wide range of measuremen­ts, by government agencies and by university researcher­s, with more than one explanatio­n put forward to explain the deaths.”

The port developmen­t on Europe’s largest brownfield site is expected to create as many as 18,000 new jobs in the area.

 ?? Photograph: Ian Forsyth/Getty Images ?? Fishers first highlighte­d the mass deaths of crabs and lobsters in autumn last year.
Photograph: Ian Forsyth/Getty Images Fishers first highlighte­d the mass deaths of crabs and lobsters in autumn last year.

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