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In his final speech on water, Sir reflects on the debate around
water quality over his seven years as Chief Executive.
Achieving clean and plentiful
water is “easy to say but hard to do”, Sir said in a speech today (Tuesday
21 February), entitled ‘Reflections on water: the good, the bad
and the future’.
He has reiterated that just
because it is hard it does not mean that we can’t get there, with
success requiring everyone to play a part.
It was Sir James’ final speech
on the water environment as Environment Agency chief executive, a
role he has held for seven years. He will be stepping down as
chief executive at the end of March.
Sir James highlighted the facts
behind improvements in water quality over the last few decades,
including:
- Sewage treatment works now discharge 67% less phosphorus and
79% less ammonia into rivers.
- An increase in the number of salmon and macroinvertebrates
(such as snails, worms and insects) in rivers, an indicator of
improving river health. Otters have also returned to every
English county.
- 72% of beaches and inland bathing waters met the “Excellent”
standard in 2022, the highest since new stringent standards were
introduced in 2015. The number of bathing waters classified as
‘good’ or ‘excellent’ has also increased to 92.8%. In the early
1990s, just 28% of bathing waters met the highest standards in
force at that time.
Sir James clearly sets out how
and why the quality of our waters has flatlined, with industrial
and agricultural pollution from sewage spills and leaky slurry
tanks, climate change, and growing human populations among the
biggest challenges.
Sir James
said:
“Just because it’s hard doesn’t
mean we can’t get there. Success will require everyone, and I
mean literally everyone, to play their part.”
“In tackling the problem, we
need to start by recognising another deceptively simple truth,
which is that the people responsible for the pollution in our
rivers are the people who pollute them. So the first thing we
need is for the main polluters – farmers and water companies – to
clean up their acts.”
Regulators play a critical role
and Sir James has welcomed the government’s recent increase in
powers, resourcing and funding for the Environment Agency.
In 2021/22 the EA received £2.2
million per annum for water company enforcement activity so that
action is taken against potential illegal breaches of
environmental permits, and an additional £1.2 million to increase
its agricultural regulation workforce.
Sir James set out examples of
how the Environment Agency is tackling water pollution,
including:
- Tough enforcement against those who don’t follow the rules.
Since 2015, the Environment Agency have concluded 56 prosecutions
against water and sewerage companies securing fines of over
£142m. The Environment Agency welcomes the government’s upcoming
consultation to
make it quicker and easier to impose penalties through civil
sanctions.
- Carrying out around 90,000 water quality sampling visits a
year from 13,000 different locations, using the results of this
monitoring to target polluters.
- Improving water habitats through planting trees and plants
that support wildlife, removing barriers to fish and eel passage,
and restocking rivers with fish.
- Working with farmers to secure better compliance with the
rules and tackling inadequate farm infrastructure and poor soil
and nutrient management.
Concluding his speech, Sir
James said:
“The most important thing about
water is that it gets everywhere. Let’s treasure it, look after
it, protect it and enhance it.”
“The Environment Agency is
committed to doing so, because if we really are going to be the
first generation to leave the environment in a better state than
we found it – an aspiration we all share – then the single most
important thing we can do over the coming years is to ensure that
we do have clean and plentiful water.”
The World Water Tech Innovation
Summit, hosted in London, brings together water companies,
regulators, engineering firms, technology businesses, investors,
and innovators to tackle the critical issues of the decade ahead
for the water sector.
The Environment Agency
continues to work with government, industry and others to drive
the improvements that we all want to see in our water environment
across England.