NEW FUNDING TO SUSTAIN RIVERS AND WETLANDS

Environmental Panorama
London – United Kingdom
September of 2005

 

12/09/2005 - The Environment Agency published (on Friday) proposals to increase the cost of licences to abstract water from rivers and groundwater in England and Wales. The increase would create a fund to enable the Agency to revoke historical rights to water which need to be revoked or limited to prevent damage to the environment and compensate abstractors whose rights are revoked. It will also meet the costs of new responsibilities assumed by the Environment Agency under the Water Act 2003.
Environment Agency Head of Water Resources Ian Barker said:

"In some places, water abstraction is damaging the environment, including natural habitats which are of international conservation importance. The only way to prevent or reverse damage, and sustain these valuable river and wetland sites for the future, will be to stop or limit damaging water abstraction."

Many areas of rivers and wetlands will receive increased and further protection with the new proposals in place. This in turn will lead to a wide range of environmental benefits including improved habitats for fish, including salmon, lamprey and antive crayfish and for wetland birds including bitterns, ducks and waders.

Around 27,000 abstraction licences are currently in force in England and Wales, ranging from large volume abstraction public water supply companies to licences for small agricultural holdings. Charges are based on a number of factors including the volume of water removed, the purpose of the abstraction and the seasonal timing of removal. Licence fees fund the work of the Environment Agency in managing the delicate balance between protecting the environment and making water available for public supply, industrial, farming and other important needs. Important legislation including the EU Habitats Directive defines our obligations for protecting natural habitats and wildlife species in law.

Initially, the Agency is proposing an increase in licence fees of between 8 and 10 % per year over the next four to five years. A premium is also proposed to be applied to abstraction licences which are currently open-ended (since 2001 the Environment Agency has granted all new water abstraction licences for limited periods only with the requirement to re-apply and this became a legal requirement under the Water Act 2003, but historically many licences were granted in perpetuity). The Agency believes the higher cost should act as an incentive to these abstractors to agree time limits in line with modern licensing practice.

The increase would be implemented from 1 April 2006, co-inciding with the introduction of changes resulting from the Water Act 2003, which will require some previously exempt types of abstraction, including trickle irrigation, de-watering of mines and abstraction relating to managing navigation, to be licensed. The Environment Agency will also assume responsibility for advertising abstraction licence applications and the proposed fee increase will be used to recover these costs.

Together, the impact of the fee increase and new licence payers would raise an additional £85m over the period to fund compensation for revoking or changing the most damaging water abstraction licences.

Ian Barker continued:

"We believe it is fair that those who benefit from access to water from the environment also share the cost of sustaining the resources they rely on for the future. The true cost of abstraction must reflect the cost of protection of the natural environment.

The first consultation was carried out in January 2004 and the final consultation on the proposed changes will run until 2 December 2005. Anyone wishing to find out more about the proposed changes can download the consultation from the environment agency website.


NOTES TO EDITORS:

The cost of managing the water abstraction licensing system and managing water resources as a whole is recovered through the Environment Agency’s Abstraction Charges Scheme. Annual charges are payable for most licences.

The Environment Agency is reviewing the way it charges for abstractions to recover the costs of making environmental improvements required by the Habitats Directive and the Government’s Public Service agreement on SSSIs and to support changes to the licensing system introduced by the Water Act 2003.

The Water Act 2003 and the Explanatory Notes are priced documents, which are published by the Stationery Office (www.tso.co.uk/bookshop). An electronic copy of the Act can be viewed by selecting the link at the end of this release.

The Habitats Directive is a major European initiative that aims to contribute towards protecting biodiversity - the variety of life - through the conservation of natural habitats and wild plants and animals. Recognising that wildlife habitats are under pressure from increasing demands made on the environment, the Directive provides for the creation of a network of protected areas across the European Union to be known as ‘Natura 2000’ sites.

The first consultation was carried out in January 2004 and the final consultation on the proposed changes will run until 2 December 2005.

The consultation can be downloaded from the Environment Agency website.

Consultation responses to can be sent electronically to alr@environment-agency.gov.uk

 
 

Source: Environment Agency – United Kingdom (http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk)
Press consultantship (Head Office/Press Office)
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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