Environmental campaigners demand the Government comes clean about where our water is coming from
A group of 37 national and local environmental groups are expressing great concern to the Secretary of State Thérèse Coffey about the water companies’ draft Water Resources Management Plans (dWRMP) in a letter drafted by WildFish. The groups include The Rivers Trust and WWF and represent all 17 water supply areas in England.
Water companies set out in these plans how they will meet future demand for water. Information on this basic, vital requirement is uncertain and misleading in the latest round of plans. Environmental groups are concerned the plans lack the necessary detail that is required to allow customers and stakeholders to understand and answer the vital question ‘Where is my water coming from?’.
The opaque nature of the plans has allowed the water industry to underreport the amount of extra water that is expected to be taken from rivers and aquifers in England.
Dr Janina Gray
Deputy CEO at WildFish
Janina continued: “Like with the sewage scandal, the water industry has failed to invest in infrastructure. The last reservoir built in England is 30 years old. The result is an industry highly dependent on the removal of water from natural resources, including our highly vulnerable and internationally important chalk streams. This has a significant environmental cost”.
Water companies over-abstract 700 million litres of water every day. This number is expected to triple by 2050. Now, more than ever, the public needs to understand the challenges facing our water supply and the huge ecological risk for nature and wildlife if water companies continue to be over-dependent on natural sources.
Not a single draft plan is easily understood. Water companies are hiding the truth to avoid criticism and accountability for the state of our nations water resources.
James Overington
Water policy officer at WildFish
James continued: “These plans rely on large reductions in personal water use. We question if people will change their water use if they are being misled about the scale of the problem.
The final WRMPs are due to be published at the end of 2023. This letter to the Government requests radical improvements so that everyone can understand how the water supply in England is organised as well as the catastrophic consequences it will have on the environment if the plans are not changed.
Signatories include WWF, The Rivers Trust, The Angling Trust and the Wildlife Trust.
Below is a full list of the signatories.
WildFish
WWF
The Rivers Trust
The Wildlife Trust
Angling Trust
Waterwise
River Action
Wild Trout Trust
British Canoeing
Froglife
Institute of Fisheries Management
Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust
Angling Trust Eastern Region
Salmon and Trout Conservation Hampshire
Salmon and Trout Surrey
Salmon and Trout Conservation Northumbria
Wessex Salmon and Trout Conservation
West Yorkshire Salmon and Trout Conservation
South York Salmon and Trout Association
Bristol Rivers Trust
Westcountry Rivers Trust
Trent Rivers Trust
South East Rivers Trust
Wessex Rivers Trust
East Yorkshire Rivers Trust
South West Rivers Association
WASP
RSPB Strumpshaw Fen
RSPB Snape Wetlands
Ilkley Clean River Group
Cam Valley Forum Water Conservation Working Group
Stour Fishery and Conservation Association
Wiltshire Fisheries Association
Upper Itchen Initiative
Save Windermere
Clean River Kent Campaign
Friends of the Ems