Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Anglers in legal move over river pollution

- GAVIN MCEWAN

AN anglers’ group has launched a legal move against a government agency that it says has not done enough to stop farm pollution in the River Wye.

Fish Legal has made the complaint to the Environmen­tal Protection Assessor for Wales over what it claims is Natural Resources Wales’ (NRW) failure to meet its statutory responsibi­lity to protect the Wye and its tributarie­s over the Welsh border.

The group, formerly the Anglers’ Conservati­on Associatio­n, alerted NRW in June 2020 and again in 2021 about the environmen­tal damage to the river systems caused, it claimed, by the area’s many intensive poultry units.

NRW initially responded that there was no evidence of a deteriorat­ion or environmen­tal damage linked to the industry, based on data from 2009 to 2015.

But late last year, the agency conceded that based on more recent data, seven watercours­es in the Wye catchment had indeed deteriorat­ed on phosphate pollution and other key measures of river health linked to farming.

“Natural Resources Wales should have been properly monitoring, investigat­ing and then acting to tackle the root causes of pollution affecting the River Wye,” Fish Legal solicitor Justin Neal said. “Yet they have no proper plans in place and there is no sign that they will be taking regulatory action to restore river health any time soon.”

Fish Legal previously succeeded in a case brought with anglers in Yorkshire in which the High Court ruled that the Government’s and the Environmen­t Agency’s river improvemen­t plans in England were unlawful.

The group’s head of practice, Penelope Gane, said this “showed environmen­tal regulators have failed to grasp the full extent of their duties when it comes to restoring river health”.

“We are now exposing the same failures in Wales and hope this will be a turning point for the fortunes of the River Wye,” she said.

Meanwhile, across the Herefordsh­ire border, Friends of the Upper Wye tweeted earlier this week it had recorded its highest-ever phosphate levels at Bredwardin­e Bridge, east of Hay-onWye.

“The sheer volume of nutrients this represents is frightenin­g,” the group said.

 ?? Fish Legal ?? The watercours­es in the Wye catchment that Natural Resources Wales concedes are deteriorat­ing
Fish Legal The watercours­es in the Wye catchment that Natural Resources Wales concedes are deteriorat­ing

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