30/05/2013 - Charter for Chalk Streams
Wildlife and river groups launch
Charter for Chalk Streams beside dried up Hertfordshire streams
UK governments blasted for 50 years of
‘lamentable environmental stewardship’
On Thursday
(May 23) the 'Charter for Chalk Streams' was launched on the banks of the over
abstracted river Beane in Hertfordshire which was once a famous fishing river
and is now little more than a dried up ditch in places. The document was
coordinated by the Angling Trust following an initial approach by MPs from the
All Party Parliamentary group on Angling.
National
wildlife and conservation organisations have now come together in an alliance
with local river restoration groups to press the government and its agencies to
radically reform water policies to enable England's endangered chalk streams to
return to good health. The Charter follows on from a special summit last December
organised in Hampshire by the Angling Trust and the Salmon and Trout
Association and is supported by WWF-UK, The Wildlife Trusts and the Rivers
Trust along with local fisheries and river groups from Dorset to Yorkshire.
Chalk streams
are recognised as a unique global asset providing a pristine environment for
wildlife with rich clean water and high quality habitat. Some 85% of the worlds
chalk streams are located in England and many in and around London have almost
disappeared in normal weather conditions. Only a handful receives the high
levels of protection that their conservation status requires.
The Charter
calls for a range of measures, including the introduction of compulsory water
metering to reduce waste and cut unsustainable abstractions. The demands
include:
- "A national designation of all chalk streams as
Special Areas of Conservation
- "Reform of National Planning Rules to allow for
meaningful objection to developments on grounds of lack of water resources
- "A primary duty on the water regulator Ofwat
to promote environmental sustainability
- "Compulsory water metering and a national
education campaign to reduce water demand
- "Less reliance on groundwater sources and clear
targets for replacing aquifer abstraction with surface supply and storage
The
Charter states:
The UK's stewardship of 85%
of the worlds chalk streams has been lamentable with many iconic rivers
suffering from over abstraction, habitat destruction, pollution and invasive
species. Both our development control and water resource planning processes are
woefully inadequate. Chalk aquifers have been over exploited as an easy and
cheap source of ready filtered water at the expense of the environment in
general and chalk streams in particular. There is an urgent need for
abstraction reform and far greater use of reservoir storage of winter run off
rather than depleting groundwater sources. Scarce water is wasted as there is
little effective demand management. We cannot go on like this.
Speaking at
the launch Charles
Walker MP, Vice Chairman of the All Party Parliamentary Group on Angling, said:
"The experience in Hertfordshire in particular demonstrates why the
changes pushed for in the Charter are needed. Yes we need new houses and yes we
need more employment but not at the expense of a unique habitat, 85% of which
is found only in the UK. Successive governments have failed build sufficient
reservoirs to collect water at times of plenty to avoid the prospect of sucking
our rivers almost empty through over abstraction during the dry periods."
National
Campaigns Coordinator for the Angling Trust, Martin Salter said:
"It beggars belief that UK governments have had the nerve to lecture Third
World countries on the management of their rainforests when our own
environmental stewardship of these global significant and once pristine rivers
is so lamentable. We waste water in this country on an industrial scale while
paying lip service to wildlife conservation. The destruction of so many of the
planets chalk streams is both a litmus test of our failure and a wake call to
take action now."
Lucy
Lee, UK Freshwater programme manager, WWF-UK, added:
"England's
iconic chalk streams are under threat, these unique and fragile ecosystems, if
lost through our over exploration, will be lost to the world forever. These
rivers are at risk for a number of reasons including over-abstraction and
diffusion pollution. WWF-UK have been working for over 6 years to explore how
we can support the more efficient management and use of water in the UK to
deliver positive outcomes for our freshwater environment.. WWF-UK very much
welcome the Chalkstream Charter to drive action to protect our endangered chalk
stream ecosystems"
Paul
Knight, Salmon & Trout Association's CEO, and a speaker at the launch added:
"There
is a lack of top level political commitment to protecting the UK's rivers and
dependent species, of which the degradation of our once pristine chalkstreams
is the most blatant example. We have particular international
responsibility toward conserving these rare and fragile chalk rivers, of which
we host a globally significant percentage in England. If we cannot
protect chalkstreams, what chance is there for any other river system?
River
conservation and wildlife groups from across the region have signed up to the
Charter including; The Chilterns Conservation Board, Action for the River
Kennet, Friends of the Mimram, River Chess Association, River Misbourne Action,
River Beane Restoration Association, The Wandle Trust, Herts & Middx
Wildlife Trust, Test and Itchen Association and the Wessex Rivers Trust.
Paul
Wilkinson, Head of Living Landscape at The Wildlife Trusts, said:
"In the UK we have 85% of all the chalk streams on Earth. Despite this
global responsibility these fragile and hugely wildlife-rich streams have been
abused and overlooked. This must change and their recovery must begin. The
Chalk Streams Charter is an important step in bringing chalk streams out of the
shadows and giving them the care and attention they need. It's fitting that the
Charter has been launched in Hertfordshire, as a recovery plan for two of
this county's beleaguered chalk rivers, the Mimram and the Beane, was launched
this year. Hosted by Herts and Middlesex Wildlife Trust, the plan is bringing
statutory agencies, environmental charities, local landowners, community
organisations and river groups together to restore and protect these special
waterways."
The
campaigners have already presented the Charter to Fisheries and Environment
minister Richard Benyon and are now planning to try and secure a parliamentary
debate on its recommendations. MPs with one or more of the 161 chalk streams in
their constituencies will be invited to pledge their support for the Charter
for Chalk Streams.
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