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Angling Trust tells MPs that dredging the Thames would make flooding worse

Written By: Angling Trust
On Date: 10/3/2014

Dredging isn’t a ‘silver bullet’ to solve the winter flooding crisis. It can actually make downstream flooding worse, is usually bad news for the environment and would have delivered a staggering extra 550 million gallons of floodwater a day into the flood hit communities of the Lower Thames. That was the stark message taken to Parliament yesterday by Angling Trust Campaigns Chief Martin Salter on behalf of the Blueprint for Water coalition.

The Environment Food and Rural Affairs Select Committee held a special hearing on the flooding which has rocked parts of Britain this winter.

The RSPB’s Rob Cunningham and the Angling Trust’s Martin Salter answered questions from the committee on behalf of the Blueprint for Water coalition. They emphasised how land management practices, such as farming, should be modified to reduce the run off of soil and water and how floodwater needs to be better stored higher up the catchment to reduce the risk of flooding further downstream.

The Chartered Institution of Water and Environmental Management’s (CIWEM) Martin Whiting also gave evidence, providing a technical assessment of where and how dredging may be one component of a package of measures, while emphasising the need to improve management of water on a whole catchment basis.

On 14 February, CIWEM published a report, endorsed by the Blueprint for Water coalition. The report - Floods and Dredging, a Reality Check - suggested solely relying on dredging can even make some communities more vulnerable to the risk of flooding.

The report calls for leadership from the government in promoting sustainable measures across whole catchments to minimise flood risks, rather than politically-motivated, knee-jerk reactions. It also warns against using the artificially reclaimed landscape on the Somerset Levels, which requires regular dredging, as a template for the management of the natural rivers of Britain.

Martin Salter told the committee:

“Wholesale dredging for flood risk management, rather than for navigation, stopped on the Thames in the early 1980s because the key engineers concluded it was a complete waste of time and money. They discovered that the river bed has barely changed over centuries, exemplified by the fact that they were pulling out Bronze Age remains in the dredging buckets when they dug into hard bed. Like many rivers the Thames is by and large self scouring and an extreme flood event will move more silt than the dredgers ever can.

Furthermore, estimates from the Environment Agency’s Flood Risk Management team revealed that had the upper and middle Thames and its tributaries been subject to the wholesale dredging some have called for, there would have been at least a 10% increase in floodwater hitting the Lower Thames communities around Old Windsor, Wraysbury and Staines where I grew up. This equates to an extra 550 million gallons of floodwater a day at the peak of the flood delivering a minimum of 6 inches to a foot more flooding to already hard hit communities.”

Mr Salter added:

“Politicians need to stop looking for quick fix solutions and recognise that extreme weather will create more flooding and that this will require a stronger, not weaker Environment Agency, more restrictions on building on the floodplain and real incentives to improve upland farming practices to slow down the flow of water throughout the catchment.”

Mr Salter described the recent attacks on the Environment Agency by government ministers as "a low point in British politics. "

The CIWEM report can be viewed here.

Ends.

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Notes to editors

For more information please contact: Martin Salter, Angling Trust, martinreadingwest@googlemail.com, Tel: 07976 946033

The Blueprint for Water coalition is a unique coalition of environmental, water efficiency, fishing and angling organisations which call on the Government and its agencies to set out the necessary steps to achieve “sustainable water” by 2015. The Blueprint for Water is a campaign of Wildlife and Countryside Link. More information is available at: www.blueprintforwater.org.uk.
Attached is the document - A History of Thames Dredging – prepared by the Angling Trust to which Mr Salter referred in his evidence.
Attached is a picture of an aerial map of Britain taken on February 16 showing the huge plumes of silt pouring into the Bristol Channel and Irish Sea. Much of this is a result of poor agricultural practices upstream but it graphically demonstrates the self scouring power of the Severn and Wye catchments.
Angling Trust
The Angling Trust is recognised by the government as the single unified representative body for all game, coarse and sea angling in England. We fight for fish and fishing by working to improve and protect fish stocks, promoting the benefits of angling for all, standing up for the environment and supporting excellence in angling. Find out all about the Angling Trust and its work at www.anglingtrust.net or call us on 01568 620447.

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