Welsh Government Takes Significant Step In Reducing Nutrient Pollution

A review of the regulation and enforcement of spreading of organic material on land, including digestate, has begun….

Why is this Welsh Government review important?

  • Spreading of organic material such as manure on land is a significant contributor to excessive nutrients in Welsh rivers.
  • Gaps in our planning system and weak regulation are allowing spreading to continue to pollute rivers.
  • This review will look at everything that is spread legally, including slurry, manures, digestate (the liquid from anaerobic digestion), sewage sludge, sludge from milk and food processing plants.
  • It is also being conducted across Welsh Government departments, linking ambitions for climate, biodiversity and nature restoration.
  • Many large structures (such as anaerobic digesters and slurry stores) are built without full planning permission yet are still being allowed to operate.
  • Between them, planners and Natural Resources Wales do not have a handle of where spreading takes place and what effects it is having on rivers. In fact, nobody does. Welsh Government have recognised that this needs to change.

What outcomes do we want?

Quite simply,

  • Our planning and regulatory system must start to protect rivers from land spreading. Currently, this is unchecked.
  • Healthy rivers in Wales.

Afonydd Cymru and Fish Legal have welcomed a review of the regulation and enforcement of organic materials being spread on land in Wales, including manures and digestate.

Wednesday 24th July, 2024

Welsh Government have this week confirmed a review into the regulation and enforcement of spreading of organic materials on land in Wales. The objective of the review is to consider the current regulatory frameworks and identify ways in which they – and their application – could be strengthened to improve river water quality.

Alongside this is a specific review of the anaerobic digestion (AD) industry, including its impacts on water quality.

These reviews will complement the planned four yearly review of the Control of the Agricultural Pollution Regulations by considering the wider regulatory framework.

The announcement has been welcomed by Afonydd Cymru and Fish Legal, two environmental organisations who have been briefing Ministers about the need to strengthen regulation by Natural Resources Wales and address gaps in planning laws which were allowing the spreading of nutrient-rich digestate to pollute Welsh rivers.

Since March 2023, they have jointly raised questions over whether the current regulatory and planning framework is sufficiently robust and enforced in a way that ensures the spreading of organic material does not pose a threat to rivers and undermines wider Welsh Government ambitions for biodiversity in Wales.

To complement the planned review of the Agricultural Pollution Regulations, I have asked my officials to review the broader regulatory regimes governing the spreading of all types of organic material and identify how these arrangements could be made more effective.

We will also be looking closely at implementation of anaerobic digestion in Wales and the scope to make improvements in the value derived from its output and its regulation.

Huw Irranca-Davies MS

Cabinet Secretary for Climate Change and Rural Affairs

Afonydd Cymru, Fish Legal and other organisations have been highlighting for some time the environmental damage caused to rivers by gaps in the regulation and planning system when it comes the spreading of organic material. We are very grateful to Welsh Government for listening to these concerns and for widening this review beyond digestate to all organic material, including manures.

This is a big step forward in resolving the problem of excess nutrients in Welsh rivers.

Gail Davies Walsh

CEO, Afonydd Cymru

(Specifically on the review of AD)

Through legal actions that we’ve taken with anglers, all sorts of gaps in planning and the regulation of anaerobic digesters and the spreading of the nutrient-rich liquor it produces have come to light.

We’ve found AD plants that have been operating for years without full planning permission. We’ve found gaps in permits. We’ve found authorities who are responsible for protecting rivers in Wales failing to get to grips with where digestate is spread and its effects on the ecology of some of the most protected river catchments in Wales, such as the Wye and Teifi.

We are encouraged that where gaps have been identified, Welsh Government is prepared to look again at the regulatory framework for this technology and its enforcement to make sure that Welsh rivers cannot and will not be polluted with impunity.

Penny Gane

Head of Practice, Fish Legal

Posted: July 24, 2024