Thousands of angling clubs, fishery owners and anglers are witnessing low river flows and water levels, which are threatening vital invertebrate life in rivers and fish stocks.
 
Angling Trust  is calling on the Government, the Environment Agency and water companies to  address the issue by developing long term sustainable management strategies for  water resources.
  
  Angling Trust  and its legal arm Fish Legal have had reports from their members of problems on  many rivers including the Eamont in the North West, the Teme in the West  Midlands, the Usk in South Wales and the Teign in Devon. Most of the problems  are caused by abstraction of water continuing as normal, in spite of the lowest  spring and summer rainfall in a generation. The situation has even seen a hosepipe  ban introduced in the North West, which is traditionally one of the wettest  areas of the country.
  
  Low flows  impact severely on the ecology of rivers and make them much more vulnerable to  pollution because there is less dilution of pollutants and warm water holds  less oxygen. The reduced wetted area means that there is less space for  invertebrates to live in, and therefore less food for fish.
  
  The Trust is  also demanding that the new Government takes on board the recommendations  contained in the Blueprint for  Water, which was developed by the Angling Trust’s predecessors and 15 other  organisations nearly four years ago. The Blueprint set out a detailed strategy  for tackling low flows and addressing water wastage:
  
  In summary:
  • Reduce total consumption of water by 20% and from 180 litres per day per  person to European average levels of 125 litres per day through education and  metering.
  • Tackle leakage in water company supply pipes.
  • Introduce mandatory water efficiency standards in existing homes.
  • Make all new-build homes water neutral in areas where water is scarce;  developers would have to ensure that new water usage is offset by investment in  efficiencies elsewhere.
  • Amend or revoke damaging abstraction licences which damage river wildlife.
  • Set out a plan for installing water meters in every home by 2020 to deter  excessive use, with tariffs to protect vulnerable customers.
  • Restore wetlands and halt development on floodplains to allow water to soak  into the ground rather than disappear out to sea.
  
  These  measures would not only protect wildlife in our rivers, but they would also  ensure security of supply for our growing population and reduce the significant  energy use and carbon footprint involved in providing water.
  
Mark Lloyd,  Chief Executive of the Angling Trust and Fish Legal said: “our members are fed  up with seeing wildlife in the rivers they fish suffering as a result of a  failure by Government, OFWAT, the Environment Agency and the Water Companies to  develop coherent plans to reduce water use and wastage in the context of  climate change and population growth. Rivers are vitally important for a whole  host of wildlife and millions of anglers.”
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