EAC launches inquiry into river health

The Environmental Audit Committee (EAC) has launched an inquiry into how monitoring, transparency, enforcement, and regulatory guidance could be improved to boost river health.

The committee will focus on waterways polluted by urban contaminants and is inviting input on a range of issues, from inland bathing waters to the efficacy of Ofwat’s regulation and the cost of reducing storm overflows.

Following a 2018 report on agricultural pollution, this inquiry will focus on urban pollutants including sewage, plastic pollution and unmonitored runoffs from highways.

EAC chair Philip Dunne said the committee will consider how pollution can be reduced after “numerous scathing reports” about legal sewage discharges. He described the “unacceptable levels of water pollution” as cause for concern for the health of ecosystems and humans.

Dunne said: “Our new inquiry will be considering how water quality can be improved, how we can push the incidence of water pollution right down and what – if any – changes to monitoring, transparency, enforcement and government guidance to regulators are needed.”

The committee is inviting written submissions on the following until February: