Watery walks lead the way to better water quality for Aberdeenshire and Moray

29 March 2010

Every journey starts with a few steps and the month of April will see environmental experts walking the land around key rivers and burns in Aberdeenshire and Moray.

Staff from the Scottish Environment Protection Agency (SEPA) will be walking sections of the Rivers Ugie, Deveron, Dee, Isla, Bogie and Buchan coastal burns, over the coming months. They will be collecting information and assessing the impacts of rural diffuse pollution. The work is an essential part of ensuring that Scotland's water quality continues to improve and meet improvement targets set for 2015 in Scotland's River Basin Management Plan.

The Aberdeenshire and Moray rivers are part of 14 Scottish water catchments that have been prioritised for work between now and 2015. Diffuse pollution, often driven by rainfall, results in water contaminated with solids and other detritous, nutrients, bacteria, pathogenic organisms and chemicals running off land into the local water environment. This is a major contributor to poor river water quality and has a detrimental affect on the condition of local beaches, as well as impacting on ecology.

SEPA has appointed Priority Catchment Officers to coordinate work in each area. Once complete a series of workshops and information events will be arranged to explain the findings to local landowners and partner organisations. SEPA will then start work with them, as well as with Scottish Government, SNH, NFUS, Scottish Water and other partner organisations, to identify what actions are needed to improve water quality and protect Aberdeenshire and Moray's environment.

Stephen Field, EPI Land Unit Manager for SEPA, said:

"Work to tackle rural diffuse pollution within Aberdeenshire and Moray cannot be completed without help from the community. We need the support of local land managers to deal with diffuse pollution issues and hope that a plan to work on the issues facing each catchment can be developed. This isn't about SEPA dictating what needs to be done to sort out the problem, it's about working together with the people that live and work in the area, and we are looking for their support in achieving environmental improvements to water quality and public health.

"We hope that any land managers meeting our staff walking the catchments during April and May will allow them to do so, as well as taking the opportunity to tell us about any water issues that concern them. SEPA will be taking steps to ensure that we communicate our priority catchment work with all those involved to help us stop rural diffuse pollution being an issue in Aberdeenshire and Moray."

Peter Brown, Water Quality Regulation Manager for Scottish Water, said:

"The rivers in Moray and Aberdeenshire are a valuable source of clear, fresh drinking water for people living in these areas. We welcome action by the local community and SEPA to reduce diffuse pollution as this helps to protect the quality of drinking water and public health, and also helps protect the natural environment of our bathing beaches, rivers and other watercourses that support a wide range of flora and fauna. Scottish Water will be contributing to these initiatives to manage diffuse pollution as they gather momentum and we are keen to play our part."

Jonathan Hall, Head of Rural Policy for NFUS, said:

"Managing water quality is as much about land management as everything else put together, with 5.6 million hectares of Scottish land under agricultural management. This means that Scotland's farmers carry a huge responsibility to ensure that the water environment is of the highest quality in every aspect and that is a challenge that they continue to rise to.

"Clear and concise guidance on measures that can be taken to minimise diffuse water pollution and improve input efficiency will benefit both the water environment and farm business performance. Tackling the key issues will need a new approach, and this kind of relationship is currently being fostered by SEPA and NFU Scotland working together."

Further information on rural diffuse priority catchments is available at www.sepa.org.uk/dpprioritycatchments.

Ends

Notes to editors

• Stephen Field will be available to do interviews today (Monday 29 March). Please telephone 01786 452546 to arrange an interview slot.

• SEPA has identified over 100 Scottish catchments that are subject to a wide range of diffuse pollution impacts. The catchments have been prioritised as focus for work between now and 2015, with other catchments to be dealt with in later years. The catchments have been prioritised using SEPA's assessment of diffuse pollution.

• The work will also include mitigation of other water quality impacts, caused by morphological change, abstractions, flooding and alien species, where these are also causing water body downgrades. Other diffuse pressures include urban run-off, sewage cross connections, septic tanks, mining and forestry.

• Diffuse pollution is the most significant pollution pressure causing water bodies to fail objectives under the Water Framework Directive (FWD).

• Public health is a key factor of bathing waters legislation and the work on the coastal burns in the water catchments will contribute to improved bathing water quality in the future.