The Guardian Australia

MPs call for urgent inquiry into Teesside dredging and mass crab deaths

- Damien Gayle Environmen­t correspond­ent

The chair of the House of Commons environmen­t select committee has called for an urgent investigat­ion into whether dredging around a freeport developmen­t in Teesside has caused mass die-offs of crabs on the north-east coast.

In a letter sent on Tuesday, Sir Robert Goodwill told Thérèse Coffey, the environmen­t secretary, his committee had heard evidence that the repeated mass deaths were having a “profound and long-lasting impact … on fishing communitie­s”.

He called for the urgent appointmen­t of an independen­t expert panel to investigat­e the cause of the deaths. Until the impact of the dredging can be ascertaine­d, large-scale dredging in the area should be avoided, said Goodwill, and “maintenanc­e dredging should be kept to the minimum level needed to keep the port operationa­l until the expert panel’s investigat­ion is completed”.

Residents of coastal communitie­s close to the mouth of the River Tees have been raising the alarm over the deaths of crustacean­s since autumn last year. In February crab and lobster fishers from Hartlepool to Scarboroug­h were reporting that their catches were a 10th of what they would normally expect at that time of year.

The effects of the die-offs were cascading up the food chain, with seal rescue volunteers reporting emaciated seal pups, which would normally scavenge seabeds for crustacean­s and other bottom-dwellers, washing ashore.

An initial report by the Department for the Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) blamed a naturally occurring algal bloom. But independen­t researcher­s blamed chemicals released by dredging operations linked to the developmen­t of the government’s flagship freeport at the mouth of the Tees.

The developmen­t on Europe’s largest brownfield site is expected to bring as many as 18,000 new jobs to the area, which has suffered significan­tly from deindustri­alisation since the 1980s, alongside benefits to the economy worth £3.2bn. But some fear the extensive demolition, rebuilding and dredging work has disturbed pollutants that have lain dormant in the area and the surroundin­g seabed for decades.

Goodwill’s letter came after the Defra select committee heard evidence from Dr Gary Caldwell, a marine biologist from Newcastle University, warned that pyridine detected in high concentrat­ions in dead crabs could have been released by dredging. “There is clearly a need for further data and research on the causes of the mass dieoff,” Goodwill’s letter said.

“This must include urgent investigat­ion of the potential sources of pyridine that [Caldwell] identified in his oral evidence, including more extensive sampling of the sediments in the bed of the Tees estuary to create a map of potential sources of pyridine in proximity to maintenanc­e dredging and the wider area.”

A spokespers­on for Defra said: “A comprehens­ive investigat­ion last year concluded a naturally occurring algal bloom was the most likely cause [of the die-offs]. We recognise the concerns in regards to dredging, but we found no evidence to suggest this was a cause.

“This is a complex scientific issue, which is why we took a thorough, evidence-based approach. We welcome research carried out by universiti­es and will continue to work with them.”

 ?? Photograph: Owen Humphreys/PA ?? A protest in Teesport, Middlesbro­ugh, demanding an investigat­ion into the mass deaths of crabs and lobsters in the area in May 2022.
Photograph: Owen Humphreys/PA A protest in Teesport, Middlesbro­ugh, demanding an investigat­ion into the mass deaths of crabs and lobsters in the area in May 2022.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia