The UK just tried to scrap EU rules that protect Britain’s waters – here’s why
The UK just tried to scrap EU rules that protect Britain’s waters – here’s why | The Guardian

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An aerial view of The River Wharfe and its official bathing area on July 11, 2023 in Ilkley.
14/09/2023

The UK just tried to scrap EU rules that protect Britain’s waters – here’s why

Helena Horton Helena Horton
 

Yesterday, the UK government failed in an attempted retreat from EU environmental standards.

Housing secretary Michael Gove and environment secretary Thérèse Coffey recently announced their intention to rip up part of the EU-derived habitats directive, to allow housebuilders to pollute some of England’s most sensitive waterways. Their amendment to do this failed yesterday, meaning they have been hampered in their quest to scrap what they call a “defective EU law”.

The amendment was sunk after the Labour party dramatically announced at the last minute that they would not be supporting the government in its plans. Previously, the party had indicated support for the move.

But ministers do seem intent on getting rid of this regulation, called nutrient neutrality, and can introduce it in new legislation.

So what does this all mean? We’ll explain after this week’s most urgent climate headlines.

In focus

People walk across the stepping stones across the River Wharfe on 11 Jul 2023 in Ilkley, United Kingdom.

When you build a big new housing development in the UK, that means lots of toilets being connected to the creaky Victorian sewage system. Many parts of the country cannot handle this extra waste, which ends up being spewed into local rivers. The waste contains nutrients such as phosphates and nitrates which feed algae, causing it to bloom, eventually choking out all life within the river.

The EU habitats directive, which was carried over into UK law after Brexit pushed the UK out of the European Union in January 2020, means sensitive areas – beautiful rare habitats in places like the Norfolk Broads and the Lake District – cannot be subject to pollution that would ruin their special status for wildlife. This means housebuilders in these particular areas, already on the brink of destruction, have not been allowed to build unless they show the extra toilets won’t cause more nutrients to go into the water.

This principle is called “nutrient neutrality”, and is a law the government has been trying to scrap after intensive lobbying by the housebuilding industry. Ministers claim removing the law could unlock 100,000 homes.

The whole story, if you are not that well acquainted with British politics, feels very arcane, niche and quirky – one of the great hopes for saving English rivers was an amendment laid by the Duke of Wellington. And crucial information that revealed the government had ignored its own watchdog’s recommendations was obtained by the quaintly named Baroness Young of Old Scone.

Whether or not you think dukes and baronesses should have anything to do with legislation, or knew what nutrient neutrality was before reading this newsletter, it does have global and wide-ranging implications.

Firstly, it shows that the UK government is willing and able to unpick hard-won EU-derived environmental law, which those who pushed for Brexit promised multiple times would never happen. Brexit will improve the environment, they said, honest! And many of these laws were those that the UK’s own European parliament representatives negotiated and pushed for. So it shows that even countries that are relative frontrunners in environmental regulation (it’s not a crowded field) can turn their backs on it when it becomes politically or financially expedient.

There’s another story here about offsetting, too. These nutrients from sewage were supposed to be offset by developers buying “credits” from nature agencies. These would then be used to improve local wetlands, which would (in theory) soak up all the extra phosphates and nitrates, naturally filtering them out and keeping the water relatively clean. Now these schemes can be dropped, and they will be – which housing developer is going to pay for this out of the kindness of their heart? Instead, the government has given a rather flimsy promise of some extra money from the taxpayer for use in wetland restoration.

Regulation and improved, greener infrastructure are much stronger controls against pollution and emissions than promises of offsetting. But they are more costly for wealthy companies, which lobby and fund the government. Which is to say: they aren’t going to happen anytime soon.

Read more on pollution:

 

George Monbiot

Guardian columnist

Person Image

The people running our country are invested in ecological disaster: much of the Conservative Party’s funding comes from pollutocrats. This helps to explain why, in the midst of the climate emergency, Rishi Sunak is licensing new oil and gas, ripping down environmental standards and using Labour’s green policies as another weapon in the culture wars.

The greater the political influence of the far right, the more environmental policies are dismantled, and the more people are driven from their homes by environmental collapse.

Can we break this vicious cycle?

On Tuesday 19 September, I’ll be joining a panel of speakers to discuss the issue. Chairing the panel will be the Guardian’s Europe correspondent Ajit Niranjan, and we’ll be joined by the columnist Nesrine Malik, and director of the Italian Institute of International Affairs, Nathalie Tocci.

I hope to see you there.

 

The change I made – No new clothes

Down to Earth readers on the eco-friendly changes they made for the planet

Clothes for sale, in secondhand shop.

Reader Chloe Faure emailed to tell us about her journey to drastically reduce the amount of clothes she owns and buys.

She credits two things that set her on a course to radically rethink her consumption: the French sustainable fashion podcast Nouveau Modèle and 2015’s Minimalism: A Documentary About the Important Things. “The very next day after watching this documentary, I just took everything out of my closet, gave a good half of it to charity and decided to never overwhelm myself again,” Faure says.

And her advice for following the same path? “If you feel that you really want or need something, wait for 30 days and see then if you still want it. If you do, go get it. If you forgot about it? That means it simply wouldn’t have brought you joy.”

Let us know the positive change you’ve made in your life by replying to this newsletter, or emailing us on downtoearth@theguardian.com

Creature feature – Amur leopard

Profiling the Earth’s most at-risk animals

An Amur leopard pictured in a forest.

Population: About 100
Location:
Far-east Russia
Status: Critically endangered

Nimble-footed and strong, they’re a rare subspecies that has adapted to life in the Russian far east. Able to leap more than 19ft horizontally and 10ft vertically, it has been reported some males help rear their cubs. Anti-poaching brigades are trying to protect the leopards, who are hunted by villagers for their valuable skins.

For more on wildlife at threat, visit the Age of Extinction page here

Picture of the week

One image that sums up the week in environmental news

Electric battery-fulled ferry

Credit: Artemis Technologies

The above digital rendering is a part of an Orkney islands project to test two electric battery-fueled ferries to cut carbon emissions from shipping. The £15.5m demonstration project, funded by the UK government, is due to start in March 2024.

For more of the week’s best environmental pictures, catch up on The Week in Wildlife here

 

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