Daily Mail

Eco watchdog in legal threat over toxic air and water

- By Colin Fernandez Environmen­t Editor

BRITAIN’S environmen­t is in a ‘precarious state’ with toxic air pollution and sewage in rivers among the most urgent issues, according to a new official watchdog.

Overfishin­g and damage to sea floors from trawling, loss of natural habitats and degraded soils must also be urgently dealt with by the Government, the Office for Environmen­tal Protection (OEP) urged.

In its first report, the OEP warned that it could take the Government to court as a last resort if it did not meet its legal obligation­s to clean up the environmen­t.

Dame Glenys Stacey, OEP chairman, said the crisis in England’s air, water, landscapes and seas should have the same level of crossgover­nment support and urgency as climate efforts to cut greenhouse gas emissions to net zero.

In a report it warns of ‘tipping points’ where slow, persistent declines in nature become catastroph­ic – such as setting fishing limits above scientific advice, which can lead to fish stock crashes, and continued damage to the seabed, which destroys the marine ecosystem.

Failing to prioritise these issues and address them before the tipping points are reached will make it much harder to reverse the declines, Dame Glenys said.

She said: ‘the 25-Year Environmen­t Plan was an ambitious attempt to confront the challenges facing the environmen­t, yet we continue to see worrying and persistent trends of environmen­tal decline.

‘Our rivers are in a poor state, bird and other species numbers are in serious decline, poor air quality threatens the health of many and our seas and sea floor are not managed sustainabl­y.’

turning the situation around will not be easy, she acknowledg­ed, but urged the Government to set a clear and ambitious vision for the environmen­t which is prioritise­d across all department­s.

‘All of us have an inarguable dependency on the environmen­t, and its precarious state should be a matter of concern for all of Government and a national priority,’ she warned.

‘there is a proliferat­ion of targets,’ she said, adding: ‘And they are frequently missed’.

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