NEW FARMING GUIDE GIVES HELPING HAND TO SAVE MONEY WHILE IMPROVING THE ENVIRONMENT


Environmental Panorama
International
December of 2008


Helping Welsh farming to become more economically viable, as well as environmentally sound, is key to how the Agency is aiming to cut red tape by working closer with the industry.

Featuring examples of farmers sharing their experiences and working practices, the guide will demonstrate the benefits that practical changes can bring to farm profitability.

It's designed to build on the significant improvements seen over the last 20 years as farmers have changed the way they manage the land to cut down on pollution incidents.

It includes workable and realistic ideas for improving water quality in line with the new EU Water Framework Directive, which aims to create a top quality water environment that can support us for the future.

Elwyn Jones, an agricultural contractor in north Wales, shows how better use of slurry can save 40% on fertilizer costs. Elwyn specialises in slurry spreading, using a calibrated tanker with slurry injectors.Also featured in the Wales Federation of Young Farmers Clubs publication ‘Breaking New Ground’, Elwyn said:

“Slurry is an important alternative to large quantities of bagged fertilizer. It can save farmers a lot of money when applied at the right time and in the right place.”

Using this method can also dramatically reduce the amount of slurry lost from run-off during wet weather and ending up in local rivers.

Chris Mills, Director, Environment Agency Wales, said:

“Farming is a vital part of the Welsh economy and culture and is not immune from the current financial pressures. This guide shows how better environmental performance can help the economic viability of the industry. Many farmers already recognise this and are seeing the benefits on their farm.

“We want to do our bit. Which is why we are aiming to work closer than ever with the industry, organising free workshops and on farm discussions so we can provide farmers with the information they need in a way that suits them.

“Farmers have made progress over the years to reduce pollution incidents helping our rivers to become cleaner. But we need to keep on improving and we want farmers to use this new guide to benefit their business and the environment.”

Daniel Downes, Wales YFC Rural Affairs Committee Chairman, said;

“Working with Environment Agency Wales recently on a joint farm walk, our members were encouraged to see how advice from EAW was not only able to support legislative requirements but also represented a common sense approach and could show how to be more efficient and save money, all aspects that we welcome from the agency.”

Dai Davies, NFU Cymru President, added;

“NFU Cymru welcomes this bilingual publication. Best Farming Practice must be the way forward and not the imposition of costly, complicated, unwieldy and outdated legislation. Farmers in Wales will respond to sound, feet on the ground helpful hints, as evidenced by the water quality of our rural rivers which have never been cleaner.”

FUW president Gareth Vaughan said:

"The Best Farming Practices Guide is based on practical studies on real farms, rather than just a desktop exercise, and it will therefore be invaluable to those who can draw parallels with the farms concerned, as well as being a useful point of reference for all farms across Wales."

Best Farming Practices is available free to farmers, growers, land managers and farm business advisers. You can download it from www.environment-agency.gov.uk/bestfarmingpractices. You can also order your own copy by telephoning 08708 506506, please reference code BFP004.
For more information contact Curig Jones on 029 2046 6251 or email curig.jones@environment-agency.gov.uk

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New rules for farmers to prevent nitrate pollution

Farmers and land managers in Derbyshire are being invited to sign up to a free seminar in the New Year which aims to help them better prepare for preventing nitrate pollution.

Farmers and land managers in Derbyshire are being invited to sign up to a free seminar in the New Year which aims to help them better prepare for preventing nitrate pollution.

The event will take place on Wednesday 7 January 2009 at the Agricultural Business Centre in Bakewell.

Around 60 per cent of the nitrate pollution found in rivers, lakes and groundwaters is caused by agriculture; and the new Nitrate Pollution Prevention Regulations, which come into force next week (1 January 2009), are a vital measure in protecting and sustaining the quality of our water supplies.

Aileen Kirmond, Head of Land Quality at the Environment Agency, said: “The majority of nitrate that’s found in our waterways comes from fertilisers, including animal slurry.

“Fertiliser is an important addition to soils to ensure strong growth of grasslands and crops, but if you spread too much or at the wrong time, the nitrates can be lost into rivers, lakes and groundwater.

"High levels of nitrates can cause problems for our aquatic plants and animals from the smallest stream right down to our marine environment.

“Nitrates can also be an expensive substance for water companies to remove from drinking supplies during treatment.

“The problem is now so wide spread that almost 70 per cent of land in England now falls into a Nitrate Vulnerable Zone (NVZ), and under the new regulations farmers in these at-risk areas must ensure they do not spread excess nitrates onto their land.”

NVZs are those areas that drain into waters that are polluted, or are likely to become polluted without action.

The free seminar, run for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) and the Environment Agency, will cover:

• Background to the new NVZ rules
• Planning nitrate use and the nitrogen requirement limits of different crops
• Storage of livestock manures
• Field application of both organic manures and manufactured fertilisers
• How compliance with the new NVZ rules will be checked
• Support, advice, and a question & answer session.

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Environment Agency clears Gloucester flood blockage

The Environment Agency attended India Road, Gloucester, today (19 December 2008) to remove items that had contributed to the recent local flooding by blocking a culvert.

The Environment Agency attended India Road, Gloucester, today (19 December 2008) to remove items that had contributed to the recent local flooding by blocking a culvert.

Following flooding in India Road last weekend, Environment Agency officers carried out an inspection of the area. In a culvert at the junction of India Road and Overbury Road they found a blockage caused by three lorry tyres, a ladder and loads of pallets.

These items would almost certainly have contributed to the flooding suffered by residents last week. They were removed by contractors today.

Technical Specialist, George Tomlin, says “This is a case where someone’s negligent activity has contributed to the flooding and increased the damage and distress suffered by local residents.

“Flooding is a natural event and cannot be prevented completely. However, people should be careful not to leave items on riverbanks where they can be carried downstream by floodwater. They can easily get stuck in culverts, like these were, blocking the flow and causing water to back up.”

Your clutter can help save lives and the environment
How donating your unwanted clothes, books and household items for reused by charity shops can also relieving pressure on the environment.

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Reusing goods will ensure goodwill for charities and the environment this Christmas

The Environment Agency and Oxfam are urging the UK public to give twice this festive season by ensuring their unwanted clothes, books and household items are reused by charity shops – while also relieving pressure on the environment.

Research undertaken by Oxfam and Marks and Spencer earlier this year showed that there are unworn clothes worth more than £4.7 billion gathering dust in the nation’s cupboards. While the Environment Agency estimates that more than 1million tonnes of clothes and other textiles are sent to landfill every year – contributing to the greenhouse gasses that cause climate change.

Environment Agency Head of Waste, Liz Parkes, said: “We need to reduce, reuse and recycle before we ever consider throwing things away. It’s crazy that quality clothes, books and household items – that are being replaced by Christmas presents – end up in landfills rather than being reused through charity shops.

“We have tough but important targets to divert biodegradable materials from landfill in order to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. In addition, by keeping our precious materials in productive use for as long as possible, we need to extract fewer raw materials from the environment.

“We all know the importance of buying products such as plastic bottles and cans that are made from recycled materials - but you can also reduce your environmental footprint by buying reusable items like clothes and books from charity shops.”

Reduce: the amount of waste produced in the first place
Reuse: products and goods where possible
Recycle: goods and materials that cannot be reused, so raw materials are conserved
Recover: energy from materials through energy from waste, composting or anaerobic digestion
Disposal: landfill waste as a last resort.

Oxfam generates more than £20 million each year by selling donated items through its 730 shops in the UK – and in the process ensures that thousands of tonnes of unwanted clothes, books and other items are reused rather then cluttering up the nation’s wardrobes and shelves.

Oxfam’s deputy director of trading Barney Tallack said: “Every January people around the UK clear out their homes, and Oxfam can make good use of many of these unwanted items to make money to tackle poverty .

“We are in urgent need of clothes, books and household items – and as the credit crunch takes hold, we need them more than ever. It doesn’t cost anything to donate items to Oxfam, but the money we raise from them makes a colossal difference and really does save lives.”

The recent downturn in the recyclable materials market means this Christmas/New Year period is an important time to reduce waste and reuse goods, even before recycling.

Ms Parkes, continued: “Prices for materials on the recycling market have stabilised and more materials are moving through the export market than they were a month ago. People can be confident in using the recycling service provided by their local authority, but at the same time they need to ensure quality items are reused – producing an even better outcome for the environment.”

ENDS

Notes to editors: Methane is 23 times more potent than carbon dioxide as a Greenhouse Gas (GHG), and accounts for 7.5% (CO2 equivalent) of the UK’s GHG emissions. Biodegradable waste breaking down in landfills (such as paper, cardboard, textiles, food and garden waste) accounts for more than 40% of all methane emissions.

 
 

Source: Environment Agency – United Kingdom
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