Western Daily Press

Citizen group set up to monitor pollution after river turns green

- CARMELO GARCIA Local Democracy Reporter

LOCAL people have set up a new grassroots community group to protect and monitor pollution levels in the upper River Wye.

Hay-on-Wye resident Richard Greatrex says he reached out to his local community after the river turned “putrid green” last summer due to intense and prolonged algal blooms.

He says many people wanted to understand what was happening to their river and they wanted to help.

Throughout lockdown, concerned residents convened via Zoom and the group grew bigger and bigger.

They set about researchin­g the many factors contributi­ng to the poor health of the river, including severe agricultur­al pollution, the discharge of human sewage and the effects of climate change.

They decided to form the Friends of the Upper Wye (FOUW) which covers the area from the Wye’s source on Plynlimon in mid-Wales to its confluence with the Lugg at Mordiford, Herefordsh­ire.

Mr Greatrex says the group quickly discovered that there was a paucity of data about the state of the Wye and there was an urgent need for more regular monitoring at many more locations.

The Friends of the Upper Wye are now designing a citizen science programme to monitor water quality with help from Cardiff University, the Environmen­t Agency and the Wye and Usk Foundation.

The group is looking to recruit volunteers who live near the Upper Wye, or a stream or brook which feeds into it, and who are willing to regularly monitor their local patch.

The citizen science programme aims to expand scientific knowledge of the Upper Wye and its tributarie­s.

The group is also launching an arts project CodwchYrAf­on/LiftTheRiv­er dreamt up by group member Eamon Bourke.

LiftTheRiv­er aims to highlight the cultural importance of the Wye and to investigat­e the role the river plays in the lives of local people. FOUW are inviting people to submit their own River Samples which could take any form, be that memories, photos, poems, paintings, songs or something else.

Mr Bourke said: “LiftTheRiv­er is intended to be something positive for local people to enjoy as we emerge from Covid restrictio­ns. It is designed to encourage new collaborat­ions and new friendship­s.”

A third strand of the FOUW is exploring the idea of applying for designated bathing water status for The Warren at Hay-on-Wye.

Such a designatio­n means that the water would be regularly tested during the bathing season and the local council would display informatio­n about water quality and pollution, allowing bathers to make informed decisions.

FOUW chair Dr Tom Tibbits said: “We decided to launch FOUW to channel the immense enthusiasm and power of the community to actually do something to help the River Wye, on which we all depend, be that for biodiversi­ty, business or leisure.

“Whether for tourism, for swimming, fishing or rowing, irrigation, drinking water, or just for enjoying, the Wye is central to any Powys or Herefordsh­ire resident’s way of life.

“We hope to empower the hearts and minds of our local communitie­s to step up to save the Upper Wye, and preserve its natural beauty for the generation­s to come.”

 ?? Western Mail ?? The upper River Wye turned green because of algal blooms
Western Mail The upper River Wye turned green because of algal blooms
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