Plagued by pollution, and with too much water extracted for use by society, not a single waterbody in England is in ‘Good’ status overall. The Government set a date of 22nd December 2021 for waters in England and Wales to be brought up to standard, after an initial 2015 deadline was missed.[i] But this Christmas there is little to celebrate… progress towards these targets has been painfully slow, with some waters in such a poor state that recently-drafted plans don’t envisage them recovering until the 2060s.[ii]
Not a single waterbody in England is in ‘Good’ status overall.
The health of our waters is assessed on two fronts – ecology and chemistry. Ecology considers the health of wildlife itself, such as fish and aquatic insects, and things that can cause them harm, like excess nutrients from wastewater and farming. In England only 14% of rivers achieve ‘good ecological status’. In Wales it is higher, at 46%.
The dire state of our waters’ ‘chemical status’ is even more concerning. Data published by the Environment Agency last year showed that every single waterbody in England failed to meet standards for pollutants known as ‘priority hazardous substances’[iii]. These are a motley crew of chemicals, from the seemingly benign – used in batteries, detergents, stain repellents and flame retardants in furniture – to the intentionally harmful, including fungicides, herbicides and insecticides. What they have in common is that all harm aquatic wildlife.
They are often long-lived so once released into the environment they persist, and are very hard to clean up – even though many are long-since banned, these pollutants are still causing problems in our waters today. As a result, the regulations allow longer for waters polluted by such chemicals to recover[iv]; they should be healthy by the 2030s – but based on current progress it’s likely that even these longer deadlines will not be met.