SOUTH EAST FACES CLIMATE CHANGE CHALLENGE


Environmental Panorama
International
January of 2008


Lucy Harding - 8-Jan-2008 - Environment Agency launches annual ‘State of the Environment’ report. View the report at: http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk/regions/southern/1168940/?version=1&lang=_e

More homes protected from flooding, improved bathing waters, better air quality and salmon returning to our rivers. These are just some of the environmental highlights of 2007. But in a report launched today, the Environment Agency is warning that despite these many improvements, climate change is now the biggest environmental challenge facing the South East and one that is increasingly affecting our lives.

The Environment Agency today (Tuesday 8 January 2008) launches it’s seventh ‘State of the Environment’ report which provides an annual environmental health check for the South East. The report for 2007 shows that there have been some significant improvements in the quality of our environment in the South East, with highlights including:

- Over 12,000 more properties across the South East have been protected from flooding in the last four years;
- Air quality has improved over the last decade as a result of developing technologies, cleaner fuels and tougher standards placed on industry;
- Salmon populations are showing signs of stabilising in the Rivers Test and Itchen in Hampshire and are also known to be returning annually to the River Thames;
- We are now using 6 per cent less water per person than in 2006.

Howard Davidson, Regional Director for the Environment Agency Southern Region, said: “We are very lucky in the South East to benefit from a high quality environment with access to both the coast and the countryside - the improvements we are seeing in areas such as our bathing water, river and air quality and wildlife are helping us all to have a better quality of life. But with climate change increasingly affecting the way we live our lives, our report shows that we still need to do more.”

The South East has the highest ecological footprint per person - a measure of the resources we use and the waste and pollution we produce.

Howard Davidson continues: “We need to take action now to adapt to the unavoidable impacts of climate change by flood-proofing housing and reducing water use for instance. But we also need to limit further change and do more to reduce our ecological footprint - landfill is still the biggest method of disposal for our waste and road traffic continues to increase. By making the right choices for the way we live we all have an opportunity to be part of the solution for the long term future of the South East.”
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Environment Agency and Kent Police foil illegal waste ring

Catherine Ross - 9-Jan-2008 - The Environment Agency and Kent Police made three arrests during raids in Rochester and Iwade yesterday (Tuesday 8 January). They raided an illegal waste site and evidence was collected to bring prosecutions.

Three men were arrested on suspicion of the illegal dumping and disposal by burning of large quantities of waste. One of the men arrested has been bailed pending further enquiries and must report to a police station in five weeks, the other two have been reported for summons and the Environment Agency is compiling a prosecution file.

A spokesman for the Environment Agency’s Environmental Crime Team said:

“Waste crime is big business in Kent. We have been using new methods and technologies for collecting evidence where we believe illegal waste activity is going on.

“In this case, the criminals have been taking waste wood from a licensed waste transfer station and burning it at an illegal site. We believe both the operators of the licensed waste site and those who have been taking the waste away and burning it have committed crimes. Now they may face fines of up to £50,000 and a prison sentence.

“We are committed to cleaning up the environment in Kent. This case should send a clear message to anyone thinking they can make a quick buck from illegal waste activity that we are watching them and they won’t get away with it.”
Notes to editors:
We are unable to give names of Environment Agency officers involved in this operation for their safety and security.

 
 

Source: Environment Agency – United Kingdom
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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