Written By: Mark Lloyd
On Date: 12/4/2010And Angling Trust appalled by successful appeal
by water companies to avoid proper regulation of sewage discharges
Fish Legal, the legal arm of the Angling Trust, has reacted with
dismay to the news that six water companies have won their appeal
against the decision of Environment Agency (EA) to provide proper
regulation for the thousands of unregulated Combined Sewage
Overflows (CSOs) in England and Wales. Over twenty years ago, in
1989, at the time of water privatisation, the water companies were
granted temporary consents for many thousands of discharges carrying
storm sewage into English and Welsh rivers. This followed the
discovery, immediately pre-privatisation, that vast numbers of these
discharges had no legal consent.
At the time, it was quite clear that the granting of temporary
consents was a quick fix designed to enable the Government of the
day to sell the companies into private hands with no potential
criminal liabilities. Under pressure from Fish Legal, the EA
eventually decided, in April 2009, to impose a set of standard
conditions on all those discharges in order to bring them into
proper regulation.
However, the companies – which include United Utilities Water PLC,
Severn Trent Water Ltd, Anglian Water Services Ltd, Yorkshire Water
Services Ltd, Thames Water Utilities Ltd and Dwr Cymru Welsh Water –
appealed the decision by the EA.
They argued at the appeal hearing that the new discharge consents
were unlawful and would require expensive works to be carried out,
putting them in a position where they might be prosecuted if there
were any future breaches.
The arguments between the companies and the EA centred on a set of
conditions which would make it an offence, for instance, to cause a
deterioration in the quality of water in rivers and lakes. Such
conditions have now been omitted, leaving a consent which permits
the lawful use of the CSOs except in the narrowest of circumstances.
Fish Legal – which had been invited to take part as an interested
party at the hearing in support of the EA – argued that it had
investigated pollutions in England caused by discharging CSOs and
that the very basic terms of deemed consents had meant that the
Agency had been unable to regulate or enforce despite the scale of
the damage caused to the environment.
However, the Inspector has now decided in favour of the water
companies, and has re-written the conditions to addresses the
companies’ concerns. In the view of Fish Legal, the new wording
allows the companies to pollute without fear of enforcement except
in the most limited of circumstances.
Justin Neal, Head Solicitor at Fish Legal, commented:
“After several years of campaigning, the Fish Legal team were
jubilant that the Agency had decided to do something about the
thousands of deemed consents in England and Wales. Our view is that
reasonable conditions in carefully worded consents could provide a
solution. However, the water companies seem to see this as an issue
where the environment takes second place. The consents resulting
from the appeal make little difference to the present situation and
it may be that we will be facing devastating pollutions in the
future where the Agency will not be able to enforce.”..
Mark Lloyd, Chief Executive of the Angling Trust and Fish Legal,
said:
“Anglers are fed up with fishing in rivers where the trees are
festooned with sanitary products and invertebrates and fish are
killed or weakened by sewage pollution. This decision delays the
restoration of rivers to good condition for the benefit of all
wildlife and fisheries unacceptably. The appeal by the water
companies is an outrageous dodge of their responsibilities to take
care of our rivers and an unacceptable failure to honour the spirit
of these consents, which were only intended as a temporary measure.
We will continue to fight for clean waters.”
NOTES TO EDITORS
1. Fish Legal is the new name for the Anglers’ Conservation
Association, which was founded in 1948 to use the law to fight to
protect the aquatic environment and fisheries. Since then, the
organisation has won in excess of two thousand cases and recovered
many millions of pounds in damages, which has been returned to the
members represented to plough back into angling and the protection
of the aquatic environment. Only four cases have ever been lost in
Court. Fish Legal employs its own in-house legal team covering the
whole of the UK, including two Scots-qualified lawyers.
2. Fish Legal operates throughout the UK and is backed by thousands
of individual anglers. In England only, Fish Legal is the legal arm
of the Angling Trust.
3. Angling clubs or fishery owners wishing to join the Angling Trust
and Fish Legal and individuals wishing to become supporters should
phone 01568 620447 during office hours, write to the address below,
or download a subscription form from our websites: www.fishlegal.net
– www.anglingtrust.net
For more information on the Angling Trust or Fish Legal, please
contact Justin.neal@fishlegal.net or write to Angling Trust / Fish
Legal, Eastwood House, 6 Rainbow Street, Leominster, Herefordshire
HR6 8DQ or call 01568-620447.
Media Enquiries out of hours: Mark Lloyd, 07973 468198
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