A unique coalition of 14 leading environmental organisations * including the Angling Trust has issued a joint call to the Coalition Government to take action on wasted water, pollution and wetland wildlife. The new Blueprint for Water is published today and sets out how the Government could ensure the health and sustainability of England’s water environment by 2015.
 While some  positive moves have been made, there is much more to be done. The Government  needs to take its responsibilities to the water environment seriously if it is  to deliver on its promise of being the greenest government ever.
While some  positive moves have been made, there is much more to be done. The Government  needs to take its responsibilities to the water environment seriously if it is  to deliver on its promise of being the greenest government ever.
  
The report  sets out proposals to reduce pollutants in our water environment and to make  polluters pay for the damage they cause. It calls for the statutory limit on fines  for polluters to be lifted and for greater enforcement of existing  anti-pollution laws.
There is a  call for fairer water pricing so bills reflect the amount of water households  use, as with most other developed countries. The overall volume of water consumed  needs to reduced by 20 per cent through less wastage, and abstraction licences  should be revoked where they damage the ecology of rivers, lakes and wetlands.
Farmers can  play a vital role in ensuring healthy rivers and wetlands and the Blueprint call  for more EU and UK Government money to be available for payments to farmers for  environmental schemes on their land. Reducing pesticide and fertiliser use,  restoring peat bogs and tackling over-grazing can all help improve water  quality and wildlife.
Rob  Cunningham, Chair of the Blueprint for Water coalition, said: “We all rely on  water in our homes and businesses, on our farms and in our factories. It is  also vital for a wide range of wildlife from fish and invertebrates to wading  birds and mammals. It is a precious resource but all too often we take it for  granted.
“A lot has  happened since we launched the first Blueprint for Water four years ago but  much more needs to be done by 2015 if we are going to ensure that our waters  are clean, our wildlife is healthy and that we are best-placed to meet the  impacts of climate change. We are resetting the challenge for a new decade and  a new administration – as well as committing to actions of our own.
“Industry,  Government, conservation bodies and the wider society all have a role to play  in creating a sustainable water environment. We know this can be done and we  know what steps need to be taken to achieve it – now we need to see real  commitment from decision makers to ensure it happens.”
The pressure  on rivers, wetlands, lakes and ponds has seen wading birds like curlew and  snipe decline by up to 60 per cent, eel populations have been devastated and  water voles, white clawed crayfish, Atlantic salmon and a host of other species  are also threatened.
Habitats and historic  assets, which rely on clean and healthy water supplies are being lost from our  landscape. Ninety per cent of raised lowland bogs have been lost in the past  100 years and there are 75 per cent fewer ponds and floodplain grasslands in  the UK. Government figures also show that more than two thirds of river and  England and Wales are failing European targets for water quality.
* The  Blueprint for water coalition is made of up the following 14 organisations;
• Amphibian and Reptile Conservation
• Angling Trust
• Association of Rivers Trusts 
• Buglife – The Invertebrate Conservation Trust 
• Council of British Archaeology 
• Marine Conservation Society 
• National Trust 
• Pond Conservation 
• RSPB
• Salmon & Trout Association
• The Wildlife Trusts
• Waterwise
• Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust 
• WWF-UK
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