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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Environment
Nicola Cutcher

Two-thirds of cattle farms in north Devon cause river pollution

The River Torridge from the Rothern Bridge near Great Torrington looking downstream towards Bideford, Devon.
The River Torridge near Great Torrington. The report said that many dairy farms had increased their herds, but not their slurry storage. Photograph: John Insull/Alamy

The government’s efforts to protect UK rivers have been labelled an “abject failure” after two-thirds of farms in Devon were found to be causing pollution when inspected by the Environment Agency.

Between 2016 and 2020, the agency visited more than 100 cattle farms in north Devon to check levels of compliance with environmental regulations, particularly around safe slurry storage and spreading.

Nearly nine in 10 farms were not compliant with those regulations and two-thirds were causing pollution, according to the report obtained by the Guardian [pdf] after a freedom of information request.

Charles Watson, from the campaign group River Action, said: “The north Devon report gives a damning indictment of the role played by the dairy industry as a major polluter of our rivers, as well as highlighting the abject failure of a defunded Environment Agency to enforce even basic environmental regulations.”

Campaigners have previously lamented the state of UK rivers, with intensive chicken farms blamed in part for the decline of the River Wye.

Sir James Bevan, chief executive of the Environment Agency, told MPs last year that, “statistically, the largest sector that is impacting our waters, in one way or another, is the farming sector”.

The report from Devon covers about 20,000 hectares (49,000 acres) of land to the north of the Taw estuary and comprises the River Caen, Bradiford Water and the River Yeo, all of which discharge into the Taw-Torridge estuary.

A popular livestock-farming region, Devon is home to more cattle than any other county in England. About 80% of the premises inspected were dairy farms.

The report said that many of the dairy farms inspected had increased the size of their herds due to “intense commercial pressure”. However, they had not expanded their slurry storage to accommodate the higher waste load.

While aware of the requirements for slurry storage, the report said farmers “often admitted to taking a business risk of not investing in infrastructure because there was little regulatory presence in the catchment and the lack of direct payback”.

Inadequate slurry storage can have serious consequences, with reports of hundreds of fish dying after river pollution incidents in Devon caused by escaping slurry.

The north Devon report worked in tandem with another covering the Axe catchment in east Devon and the findings and conclusions of both were strikingly similar.

dead fish in rows on river bank
More than 9,000 dead fish were taken from the River Mole, Devon, in 2019. Officials found they had been killed by anaerobic digestate being washed from fields into the river by heavy rain. Photograph: Environment Agency

The Axe report visited 86 dairy farms between 2016 and 2019 and found that 95% didn’t comply with environmental regulations and 49% were polluting. While the Axe report was published, the North Devon Priority Focus Area report remained unpublished until the Guardian’s FOI request.

Most of the area covered by the report in the Taw catchment is classified as a “nitrate vulnerable zone”. This requires each farm to have storage for five months of slurry, yet according to the report, few farms met this condition.

The findings were a “damning indictment” of the farming industry and the Environment Agency’s inability to prevent pollution, said river campaigners. The report says that over the past 15 years “regulation has been minimal” due to funding cuts at the agency.

From 2016, there was a target to visit “0.5% of farms a year”, said the report, which would mean farmers could “confidently expect that they would not get an inspection in their lifetime, or maybe five or six generations of their offspring”. This “may have led to complacency about regulations and a general reluctance to engage with the Environment Agency”.

At the start of the project, the report said the inspecting officer was “subjected to hostility, aggression, and threats of physical violence”.

Of the 66 farms found to be causing pollution at the time of the officer’s first visit, the report says the EA “have only managed to confirm that 14 have stopped their polluting discharges, mainly because we have been unable to carry out follow-up visits and the farmers have not proactively updated us”.

It noted “a strong belief that the Environment Agency does not have enough officers to reinspect and enforce the regulations”, and admitted, “to an extent this is right”.

Since the report was written, the Environment Agency has sought to recruit an additional 84 farm inspectors. The report states that “nearly every farm visited was Red Tractor Assured”. The Red Tractor logo is meant to offer consumers a guarantee of high standards of environmental protection on farms. Red Tractor was approached for comment.

Watson said the report “raises serious questions over the legitimacy of the Red Tractor as a credible environmental standard given virtually every polluting farm was signed up to its assurance scheme”.

You can send us your stories and thoughts at animalsfarmed@theguardian.com

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