Saturday, 21 December 2019

lEA bOATERS VS pYMMES BROOK

River Lea Oil Disaster ▶ We call for effective environmental protection for our waterways

The River Lea flows south from the Chiltern Hills through East London to the River Thames, and is a major source of London’s drinking water. The Lea Valley is home to over 200 bird species, over 35 species of mammal and over 500 species of plant; all of which are under persistent threat from contaminated waste entering the river at Pymmes Brook.

On Sunday 11th February 2018, the River Lea saw its worst – but by no means only – incident of waste crime in recent history when used engine oil entered the river at Pymmes Brook. The slow emergency response by both the Environment Agency and the Canal & River Trust enabled the contamination to spread up- and downstream over five miles of waterway. 

By the Environment Agency’s own calculations, over 78,000 litres of oil-polluted water has been removed from the contaminated area since the incident. The Swan Sanctuary rescued more than 30 swans and other waterbirds. Many other animals died. There were already 40 swans in care at The Swan Sanctuary following another recent pollution event from Pymmes Brook on 28th December 2017 – otherwise admissions in February 2018 would likely have exceeded 70.

Local residents, businesses, rowers, walkers, tourists and live-aboard boaters have been subject to harmful fumes, along with the sight of dead and contaminated wildlife; not to mention the toxic waste itself. Some local river-based businesses and organisations have had no option but to cease operations during this time.

A boater and Canal & River Trust joint volunteer clean-up effort was undermined when hazardous waste held in unsealed tonne bags, including dead animals, was left on public towpaths uncollected by the Environment Agency for over three weeks.

Volunteers have noted the Environment Agency’s proactive work at the source of the spill, as well as the initial dedication of a handful of Canal & River Trust staff on the ground. It is, however, over one month since the incident and volunteers are still organising regular clean-up operations with no support from the Environment Agency or the Canal & River Trust.

After one month, the oil spill has still not been contained or cleaned

Throughout this environmental disaster communication between agencies and the affected communities has been substandard, and has fallen short of the most basic expectations:

  • No clarity between Environment Agency and Canal & River Trust’s responsibilities
  • No evidence of an emergency response contingency plan or strategy
  • Insufficient briefing of Canal & River Trust staff and volunteers
  • No proactive or clear communication with boat licence holders, rowing clubs or marinas
  • No education of towpath users or local businesses
  • Lack of clean-up resources available to boaters and volunteers
  • Failure to close waterways quickly and the premature reopening of Hertford Union Canal leading to spread of the contamination

The Canal & River Trust has acknowledged they “deal with on average six pollution events each year relating to the discharges from Pymmes Brook”. Why then were authorities so unprepared to cope with this major incident?

The Canal & River Trust’s purpose is “to act as guardian for the canals and rivers of England and Wales – ensuring that history, nature and communities are central to everything we do.” The Environment Agency “protect and improve the quality of water, making sure there is enough for people, businesses, agriculture and the environment.”

We, the Undersigned, call upon the Addressees to provide: 

  • Explanations – Why was an environmental disaster neither acted upon immediately, nor respective actions clearly communicated?
  • Transparency – We call on the Environment Agency and Canal & River Trust to share publicly their waste crime response and communication strategy, including roles and responsibilities and allotted emergency budget.
  • Improvements – We demand an inter-agency investigation and root cause analysis of the February 2018 River Lea Oil Disaster and clean-up response. Lessons learnt and future measures to prevent and cope with disasters of such nature should be shared publicly.
  • Accountability – We call on DEFRA, EAC and the EFRA select committee to hold the Environment Agency and the Canal & River Trust to account for their handling of this disaster and to consider whether the agencies are adequately funded to meet their public objectives.
  • Scrutiny – A process established whereby charities and community groups can review the approach to water quality and pollution management within the Lea Valley.

Open letter and online petition created and signed by:

Lea Boaters Collective
Anna Krรถger, Emily Nicholl, Graham Ryder, Gwennan Thomas, Jola Mackenzie, Laurie Watkins, Elizabeth Perrett, Sophie Scott, Tom Whitehead, Topher Dagg

Thames21
Debbie Leach, Chief Executive

The Green Party
Caroline Russell, Assembly Member
Sian Berry, Assembly Member
Alastair Binnie-Lubbock, Hackney Green Party Mayoral Candidate

The Swan Sanctuary
Dorothy Beeson MBE, BEM, Founder

London Waterkeeper
Theo Thomas, Chief Executive

NBTA London
Dave Mendes da Costa, Chair

Residential Boat Owners’ Association
Alan Wildman, Chair

Moo Canoes
Katy Hogarth, Founding Director 
Alfie Hatt , Founding Director

Alfred le Roy
Ben Perkins, Captain

Save Lea Marshes
Caroline Day, Representative
Abigail Woodman, Representative

Lea Rowing Club
Lucy Stackpool-Moore, Club Captain

Amwell Magna Fishery
Feargal Sharkey, Chairman

Tottenham & Wood Green Friends of the Earth
Quentin Given, Co-ordinator

Stonebridge Lock Coalition
Frances Dismore, Chair
Sue Wend Ho, Secretary

A copy of this letter will be sent to:

Environment Agency: Sir James Bevan, Chief Executive; Dr Toby Willison, Executive Director of Operations; Sarah Chare, Director Operations South East Simon Hawkins, Deputy Director Hertfordshire & North London.

Canal & River Trust: Richard Parry, Chief Executive; Peter Birch, Group Environment Manager; Jon Guest, Waterway Manager in London; Nick Smith, National Waste and Contamination Surveyor.

Government and Opposition:
Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (DEFRA): Michael Gove MP, Secretary of State for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs. Thรฉrรจse Coffey MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for the Environment.

The Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (EFRA) Committee: Neil Parish MP, Chair.

Environmental Audit Committee (EAC): Mary Creagh MP, Chair.

Labour Party: Sue Hayman MP, Shadow Secretary of State for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs. David Lammy MP, Tottenham. Dianne Abbott MP, Hackney North & Stoke Newington, Shadow Home Secretary. Meg Hillier MP, Hackney South & Shoreditch

Reasons for signing

 
 

Grassroots campaigning and direct action group formed by boaters following the industrial oil spill on the River Lea in Feb 2018. E-mail: leaboaters@gmail.com

London
Joined March 2018
Lea Boaters Collective retweeted
Ooh it’s looking festive down #TottenhamLock! Not one but TWO fridges compromising the @CanalRiverTrust #PymmesBrook, #LeeNavigation pollution containment boom. @leaboaters @plasticfreehkny
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Lea Boaters Collective retweeted
I just searched for #Youthquake and #turnout. I wish I hadn’t. I have hope now. It’s painful. There’s a country out there to save. GO AND VOTE. #VoteNHS #generalelections2019
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Lea Boaters Collective retweeted
***4 Days Left to register*** facebook.com/events/24796693… Join us for this one final epic can(al)vass of the towpath starting this SUNDAY nr Mile End and heading west to Uxbridge. We’ll get as far as we can before the final date for registration The ‘moor’ The Merrier!
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Lea Boaters Collective retweeted
Sewage overflows still plague the Thames. While the river is cleaner than it has been in a generation we're at risk of undermining that progress. Thames Water & the regulator are failing to agree long-term investment that will protect our precious river. londonwaterkeeper.org.uk/pet…
Rower notification from Thames Water: Mogden Sewage Treatment Works (STW) Following the recent rainfall, Mogden Sewage Treatment Works has in the last hour discharged heavily diluted storm water into the River Thames Storm water is screened, settled in tanks and mixed with…
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Lea Boaters Collective retweeted
A TALE OF TWO CITIES. While people standing on Westminster Bridge London are able to photograph raw sewage collecting in the Thames right beside parliament the chair of the @EnvAgency @EmmaHowardBoyd can be seen posing outside the @UN in #newyork. Need I say more.
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Lea Boaters Collective retweeted
We need to talk about #PymmesBrook #HealthyRivers @LDN_environment @LondonAssembly (Constant stream of #pollution observed at the confluence with #LeeNavigation today!) #WorldRiversDay
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Lea Boaters Collective retweeted
Forgot to mention this. The upper River Lee is a chalk stream and seems to be missing about 53% of its flow for this time of year, the remainder, what's currently flowing in the river, is in all probability made up of 100% of the discharge from the Luton Sewage Treatment Works
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Lea Boaters Collective retweeted
It looks like oxygen levels have dipped in the River Lea & fish are suffering. Rain washes pollution off roads. Roads warm the rain too, so the water holds less O2. Not sunny today so less photosynthesis to boost daytime oxygen levels. Photo by @deedeelea nr the Olympic Park
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Lea Boaters Collective retweeted
Irony that clean up boats sit idle 50 yards from this garbage and pollutants.
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Lea Boaters Collective retweeted
At Lea Bridge Road. Complete with useless BOOM!!
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Lea Boaters Collective retweeted
@EnvAgencySE @plasticfreehkny @mayorofhackney This is the mess on the canal next to the Green Flag Millfields Park. The Hackney Rangers do a outstanding job maintaining our green spaces - spoilt by lack of care on our water.
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Lea Boaters Collective retweeted
@CRTContactUs @CRTSouthEast @EnvAgency Huge floating island of toxic trash! Near Princess of Wales in E5 Clapton, London on River Lea. ๐Ÿคข@LDNWaterkeeper @StonebridgeLock @leaboaters @thisisyourriver @Feargal_Sharkey Previously reported yet no action. Poor fish/ birds!!
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Lots of people ask us about river clean ups, well @Thames21 are the experts, learn from the best ⬇️๐Ÿ’š
We're running our flagship Leading a Waterway Clean Up training course in #Thamesmead on Friday 21st June and Friday 5th July, and there's still a few places left ๐Ÿ™Œ๐Ÿ‘จ‍๐Ÿซ To book your place or get more information, please email Poppy.Flint@thames21.org.uk
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Lea Boaters Collective retweeted
The boom across the mouth of the Pymmes Brook in Tottenham has been replaced countless times (my photo is from Sept 2014). We've seen it in different shapes and sizes but each boom has a one thing in common - useless at preventing pollution entering the River Lea.
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There is a trash island floating down #riverlea AGAIN. Boom has broken free from Pymmes Brook after ☔️ AGAIN. #PlasticsChallenge #borednow Post your pics & caption competition @CanalRiverTrust @hackneygazette @MooCanoes @LDNWaterkeeper @Feargal_Sharkey @Thames21 @StonebridgeLock
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Lea Boaters Collective retweeted
Today is #WorldOceansDay! ๐ŸŒŽ๐Ÿ’ฆ๐Ÿ‹ Rivers are one of the main ways #PlasticPollution gets into our oceans. Plastic in rivers = plastic in oceans ๐Ÿ‘Ž #TogetherWeCan๐ŸŒŠ stop the #PlasticPollution problem by cleaning up our #rivers and keeping them #PlasticFree. @WorldOceansDay
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Lea Boaters Collective retweeted
Be an ocean hero this #WorldOceansDay and together we can create a wave of change ๐Ÿ’™๐Ÿšฎ๐ŸŒŠ๐Ÿฌ๐Ÿ‹๐ŸŸ keepbritaintidy.org/litterhe… #LitterHeroes
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