12/08/06
PIKERS
CALL FOR PUBLIC ENQUIRY OVER MASSIVE WATER TRANSFER SCHEME
 The
Pike Anglers Club is calling for a public enquiry into a massive water abstraction
scheme it fears could damage historic pike fisheries and internationally-important
nature reserves.
It
has written to Environment Secretary David Miliband, urging him to insist on a
full investigation into the envionmental consequences of Essex and Suffolk Water's
Abberton Expansion Scheme. ESW
wants to raise levels at Abberton to see the drought-hit South-east through dry
summers. It says
it will need to increase the amount of water it abstracts from the Great Ouse,
at Denver, near Downham Market, to make it 60 per cent larger. But
environmental assessments show if the scheme gets the go-ahead, could damage vital
habitats, by increasing saline encroachment in the tidal Ouse, which could in
turn lead to parts of the Old Bedford River, Delph and Well Creek becomeing saline. "We
began investigating this when members were warned that fishing at Abberton Reservoir,
in Essex, would be stopped," said PAC secretary Mark Barrett. "We
have since learned that historically-important pike fisheries are also in jeopardy,
along with the biodiversity of the Great Ouse catchment - not to mention its estuary,
The Wash. "A
threatened fish species, the spined loach, is also under threat. We are therefore
calling for a public enquiry not only to safeguard our members' fishing, but the
unique and vital habitats whose future is now in doubt."
In
its letter to Mr Miliband, the PAC says: "We
enclose preliminary environmental assessments, which show that the increased abstraction
of water from the River Ouse, which is part and parcel of the scheme, could reduce
flows in the tidal river, increase salt encroachment and threaten both historic
coarse fisheries and internationally-important bird reserves. "We
fear this scheme could alter the entire ecology of parts of the Fens, heighten
risks to endangered species and threaten populations of coarse fish and birds
which are already at grave threat from climate change. "Both
fish and birds play a vital role in the tourism economy of the area. Along with
the thousands of anglers who travel from all over the country to fish the Fens,
tens of thousands visit the Ouse Washes and Wildfowl and Wetland Trust reserves. "The
Abberton Expansion Scheme has potential to create controversy on both a national
and international scale, since the Ouse Washes, which would be placed at increased
risk of becoming saline, are a Ramsar site."
The
RSPB is on record as saying it the ecology of the internationally-important Ouse
Washes, which are a Ramsar site for over-wintering birds, could be at risk. The
Pike Anglers Club fears it will also heighten threats to coarse fish populations
and the biodiversity of the entire Great Ouse catchment, where fisheries scientists
are already on record as saying changes in river management practices have led
to whole year classes of fish being lost. The
Great Ouse Boaters Association fears increased abstraction at Denver could reduce
flows in the tidal Ouse. This would accellerate siltation, which in turn would
mean water being let out to sea via the Relief Channel, whose fish populations
have been devastated by harsh winter run-offs. "We
are a conservation group which campaigns to preserve both the pike and pike fishing,"
Mark Barrett said. "We
are therefore calling for a public enquiry into this scheme and the opportunity
to put our case that riverine environments will be at risk if it is given the
go-ahead in its present form." The
PAC is writing to MPs and conservation groups such as the RSPB, Wildfowl and Wetlands
Trust, along with angling clubs across the Fens to call for their support. |