Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Ban on burning of grouse moors now looks likely

- Local Democracy Reporting Service

A BAN on grouse moor burning in Calderdale looks set to be on the way - but it will have to get the approval of the full council.

Calderdale’s ruling Labour Group have agreed to the move as voluntary moves to scale the process back have not proved 100 per cent successful.

Cabinet member for Climate Change and the Environmen­t, Coun Scott Patient (Lab, Luddenden Foot) said unique circumstan­ces in Calderdale, which has suffered three major floods in eight years, with natural flood management a growing component of flood alleviatio­n work, were part of the reasoning for the group’s decision.

It is also in line with Government’s announced intention to end the practice, says the Labour Group, which has a majority on the council.

Clr Patient said although it was hoped legislatio­n could be produced promptly, the proposals would need to be supported by the full council.

Full council meetings are only set to resume later in the summer although committee and Cabinet meetings have been running successful­ly in virtual form, because of the COVID-19 pandemic, on the council’s YouTube channel since late April.

Coun Patient indicated approval was likely to come down the line from that.

He also stressed the group did not think all moorland burning was down to grouse shooting ownerships and the proposal did not just relate to that - there had been incidents where people had taken barbecues onto moorland risking starting fires.

It was also important to recognise good partnershi­p work being done between landowners and partners to help mitigate flood risk and move towards less environmen­tally damage cutting of the moorland, he said.

This was because moorland burning had a broad range of ecological impacts including degrading peatlands, releasing harmful gases into the atmosphere and, if fires from whatever source burned out of control, it put pressure on the fire service, risked damaging habitat and could impact on communitie­s’ flood resilience, said Clr Patient.

“There has been an attempt, through voluntary initiative­s, to scale back - to reduce and eventually eliminate - the burning of fragile and important peat ecosystems, but that has not proven 100 per cent successful as had been hoped.

“The council’s leading group welcomes the Government’s decision to legislate to end burning because the alternativ­e approach of voluntary arrangemen­ts simply has not worked,” he said.

Burning heather on the moorland is done to encourage new shoots, on which grouse feed, to come through, engineerin­g an optimal breeding habitat for the game birds, says the Labour Group proposals.

Campaigner­s who are opposed to grouse shooting have welcomed the move.

The alternativ­e approach of voluntary arrangemen­ts has simply not worked.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The move will need to be approved by full council
The move will need to be approved by full council

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom