Reducing river pollution through new action plan agreed at Welsh Government-led summit
Lleihau llygredd afonydd drwy gynllun gweithredu newydd a gytunwyd mewn uwchgynhadledd o dan arweiniad Llywodraeth Cymru
“We are a government committed to our rivers.”
Those were the words of First Minister Mark Drakeford as he confirmed details of a new action plan agreed at the latest River Pollution Summit.
The summit, held in Cardiff on Wednesday, March 8, brought together senior representatives from regulators, water companies, developers, local government, farming unions, academia and environmental sectors.
The aim was to develop a ‘strategic, joined-up approach to tackling phosphorus pollution’ and after a few hours, all organisations agreed to implement a new action plan.
First Minister Mark Drakeford said: “We said we would bring people together and we brought people together; we said we would develop an action plan and we have developed an action plan - we are a government committed to our rivers.
“At this year’s summit, we discussed the need to be able to move at speed and accelerate actions, to strip away any unnecessary complexity and provide certainty and consistent messaging across the range of different challenges.
“We need to bring forward, quickly, mitigation measures to create headroom to support sustainable development now whilst also securing the longer-term investment to restore our rivers.”
The Relieving Pressures on SAC River Catchments to Support Delivery of Affordable Housing Action Plan has several key themes:
- the need for a joined-up approach and the need for fit for purpose governance and oversight arrangements to support decision making in failing SAC rivers;
- the need to use natural solutions more effectively in order to deliver multiple benefits;
- the need to work constructively with the agriculture sector to find solutions to reduce and address excess nutrients in the soil and SAC rivers of Wales;
- delivering short term solutions to address current planning constraints;
- development of a unified nutrient calculator to directly aid planning decisions on nutrient neutrality which will have the ability to take account of catchment-level data, local features and needs;
- provide clarity to stakeholders on the suitability of potential mitigation actions and interventions to reduce pollution;
- a unified approach to catchment consenting in failing SAC rivers; and
- increasing our understanding of practical measures within catchments which could be provided by Nutrient Trading.
The First Minister added: “I am confident that delivering the actions identified will allow housing development in the affected SAC river catchments to restart.
“There is no single measure which will solve this problem and even a contribution of measures will take time to undo the cumulative harm of the past.
“Across the Welsh Government we are committed to improving the quality of our rivers across Wales and the River Basin Management plans, published last year, outline the actions required to allow our rivers to thrive.
“Although there have been improvements, we need to take an integrated catchment approach focussing on multi-sector co-operation and nature-based solutions to drive water quality improvements.
“Only by combining the actions of every sector can we tackle multiple risks impacting our lakes, rivers and streams and deliver real improvements to the quality of our waterways.
“I would like to thank everyone who took part in the summit – we all have a role to play in improving the quality of water in our rivers and reducing phosphorus pollution.”
ENDS