Western Daily Press (Saturday)

New wetland to help tackle homes jam

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THE first new wetland created to absorb run-off pollution, and so help free up Herefordsh­ire’s planning logjam, should be in use by the end of the year, a senior county official has said.

The council is using £2 million in government funding to buy land close to sewage works on the edges of settlement­s to turn into wetlands, which will then filter out phosphates from the sewage.

Developers will be required to buy credits in proportion to the impact of their schemes in order to get them approved.

Marc Willimont, Herefordsh­ire Council’s assistant director for regulation, environmen­t and waste services, confirmed: “The first wetland site should be in place by the end of this year, when the first credits will be sold.”

He added: “Due to commercial sensitivit­y we are unable to give the name of the village(s) which this first wetland will serve as we are yet to exchange contracts. However, it is in the north of the county, with the brook into which it drains joining the River Lugg before Leominster.”

The catchment area of the central section of the River Wye, and its tributary the Lugg, together cover most of the county and are a designated special area of conservati­on (SAC).

In July 2019 Natural England told the council it would object to any planning applicatio­ns that would increase nutrient levels, particular­ly phosphates, in these areas.

As a result, 82 planning applicatio­ns involving 1,650 homes are currently on hold, though schemes that can be shown not to increase phosphate levels can still go ahead.

Under the nutrient management plan overseen by the council, the River Wye SAC is supposed to hit legal water quality targets by 2027.

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