England’s rivers to remain in poor state as EU laws ignored post-Brexit, says watchdog
Government's failure to match EU measures to improve condition of rivers, lakes and oceans called deeply concerning'
England's rivers are likely to remain in a poor state for years to come because the government is failing to put in place EU clean water laws post-Brexit, the watchdog has found.
When Britain was a member of the EU, the government was required to follow the water framework directive (WFD), standards for waterways that have been credited with cleaning up Europe's dirty water.
Under their worst-case assessment, just 21% of surface waters will be in a good ecological state by 2027, representing only a 5% improvement on the current situation. This would break the Environment Act, which aims to improve air and water quality, protect wildlife, increase recycling and reduce plastic waste.
There is insufficient funding to meet the targets, meaning that under the WFD ministers are being compelled by the OEP to write a new, properly funded plan to protect the country's waters. The Environment Agency has calculated a cost of 51bn to clean up England's waters, which would provide 64bn in monetisable benefits. However, confirmed funding of only 6.2bn is just 12% of that required.
There is not enough monitoring taking place to find out the state of England's waterways, making it nigh on impossible to clean them up.
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