Campaigners call for stretch of River Avon to be given bathing water status
Campaigners near Bath are calling for bathing water status to be given to a popular stretch of river to make it cleaner and safer.
If the application is successful, Warleigh Weir on the River Avon would be the second river in the UK to gain designated bathing water status after the River Wharf in Ilkley, according to Sky News.
The Environment Agency would then have to test the quality of the water regularly in the summer season so swimmers could make an informed decision about whether or not to go into the river.
“For this site, getting designated bathing water status is really important because it means the Environment Agency can hold polluters to account and reduce the pollution in our water. That means we can swim in the water and enjoy it more,” says Johnny Palmer, the owner of Warleigh Weir and leader of the campaign, also adding that the issue is becoming even more critical with the surge in popularity of wild swimming.
Only 14% of Britain’s rivers meet Good Ecological Status and that figure has not changed since 2009, according to the Environment Agency, reports Sky News. It compares poorly to France, where hundreds of rivers already have bathing water status.
Mark Lloyd, chief executive of The Rivers Trust, identified two main problems with pollution in UK rivers: agriculture and sewage from storm overflow. “When it rains heavily – and it should be in exceptional circumstances but our sewage system is so undergunned for the demands on it that it overflows even with light rain – large quantities of water get washed off large surfaces so that sewers get filled up and beyond capacity.
“So, the water is either going to back up into people’s homes or it has to be released into rivers. That is raw sewage coming into our rivers which I think is unacceptable.”
Lloyd agrees that designating more rivers as bathing waters would help address the problem by encouraging polluters to improve the level of investment in water treatment and reduce the number of sewage overflows.
But that comes at a high cost for water companies, farmers and agricultural businesses, according to Sky News.
Director of compliance at Wessex Water, Matt Wheeldon, believes there are better ways to improve water quality. The company is conducting its own investigation using underwater probes that measure a variety of different parameters 24 hours a day. “The whole bathing water directive is based on 20 samples a year in the bathing season,” he says.
“It doesn’t give people real-time water information on which to make a decision. It takes measurements and then reports them days later. What we are doing is using artificial intelligence to convert easy-to-measure data into really important data which could affect public health.”
It will take at least two years, however, until Wessex Water has the results of its investigation.
With the surge in wild swimming across the UK, campaigners want prompt action to protect rivers and they are hoping designated bathing status will achieve that.
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