Almost all the rivers in England fail quality tests, report reveals
PLASTIC pollution continues to threaten England’s rivers, the Environment Agency has warned following a report revealing nearly nine in 10 fail to meet environmental quality standards
Publishing the report, agency chairman Emma Howard Boyd said there were “too many serious pollution incidents” which could harm wildlife, the environment and people, with 317 affecting water bodies in 2016.
She called for tougher penalties for polluters, and for farmers and water companies to do more to protect Eng- land’s precious water resources.
The agency said households and businesses must do more to keep plastics, fats and chemicals out of drains, and water companies must continue to reduce pollution from sewers and treatment works.
The study also revealed that nearly half of groundwater aquifers, which can be important for drinking water supplies, will not meet good chemical status by 2021, often as a result of nitrates from agricultural fertiliser.
Some 86 per cent of rivers had not reached good ecological status in 2016, with the main issues facing water bodies including pollutants from agriculture and rural land management, urban areas and run-off from roads. There were “unacceptable levels” of phosphorus in more than half of them, usually due to sewage effluent and pollution from farmland, which can choke wildlife as it causes algal blooms which use up the oxygen in water.
Over the last decade the number of serious water pollution incidents from water companies has remained broadly the same, about 60 a year, or more than one a week, the report said.
Ms Howard Boyd said: “Water quality is better than at any time since the Industrial Revolution thanks to tougher regulation and years of hard work by the Environment Agency and others. But there are still far too many serious pollution incidents which damage the local environment, threaten wildlife and, in the worst cases, put the public at risk.
“I would like to see fines made proportionate to the turnover of the company and for the courts to apply these penalties consistently. Anything less is no deterrent.”
The State of the Environment: Water Quality report found that in 2016, three-quarters of the tests the Environment Agency had taken to measure the health of rivers were rated good.
But only 14 per cent of rivers reached the standard of “good ecological status” overall, because if one test comes back as a failure, the whole water body fails to obtain good or better status.