Western Daily Press

Trusts will co-operate on River Wye pollution

- GAVIN MCEWAN wdp@reachplc.com

WILDLIFE organisati­ons on both sides of the border say they will up campaignin­g to halt pollution of the River Wye in both England and Wales.

Jamie Audsley, who took over as Herefordsh­ire Wildlife Trust’s chief executive in August, told a meeting this week that with local elections due in the county next May, “people don’t know about this issue, and elections are an opportunit­y to get this out there.”

“We will collaborat­e nationally on this, and also on consumer campaigns,” he said.

His counterpar­t on the Welsh side of the border, Radnorshir­e Wildlife Trust chief executive James Hitchcock, said: “Local politics matters, and Herefordsh­ire is ahead of Powys on this – though we’ve just had a big change in leadership.”

But it would be “dangerous to pitch England against Wales” over the issue, he said.

“Wales has different agri-economics. The Wye gets markedly worse as it goes through England, where there are nutrient-hungry crops like maize from which phosphate runs off. Farmers are up against it and what they are doing is legal. The poultry industry could solve it overnight, but won’t without legislatio­n and public pressure.”

The Environmen­t Agency says more than 60 per cent of the phosphate in the Wye catchment, which causes harmful “blooms” of algae, comes from poultry and other livestock manure.

A crowd of about 65 had filled the upstairs of De Koffie Pot next to the Wye in Hereford to debate how to move forward on the issue, following a screening of the recent BBC TV documentar­y What’s Killing Our Rivers?, presented by environmen­t correspond­ent Wyre Davies.

BBC Herefordsh­ire reporter Nicola Goodwin, who worked on the programme, said it focused on the economic impact of the problem, “as those who don’t care about the river, will care about housing”.

Housebuild­ing in much of Herefordsh­ire, as well as in parts of Wales, has been suspended unless developers can prove that they wouldn’t be adding to the river pollution problem.

Merry Albright, a local developer and campaigner, said: “Meat is only cheap because no one pays for the pollution it causes.”

 ?? BBC ?? The recent BBC TV documentar­y What’s Killing Our Rivers? presented by environmen­t correspond­ent Wyre Davies
BBC The recent BBC TV documentar­y What’s Killing Our Rivers? presented by environmen­t correspond­ent Wyre Davies

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