the history of the westcountry rivers trust

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The Rivers Trust ‘the umbrella body of the rivers trust movement’ www.theriverstrust.org Global thinking – local action Arlin Rickard - Chief Executive

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Page 1: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The Rivers Trust ‘the umbrella body of the rivers trust movement’

www.theriverstrust.org

Global thinking – local action

Arlin Rickard - Chief Executive

Page 2: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The Story…

• Time-line • The issues • In the beginning • The trustees • The idea • The name • The logo • The people - mentors & heroes all • WRT Projects • The Rivers Trust / Association of Rivers Trusts • The Catchment Based Approach (CaBA) • The future?

Page 3: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

How long have you got!

Arlin Rickard & time-line • 1993 - discussions with Stuart Gardiner • 1994 - formation of WRT, with AR as Director (unpaid) • 1995 - received WRT charity number & launch event • 1996 - Tamar 2000 SUPPORT Project • 2001 - launched ‘Association of Rivers Trusts’ • 2004 - receive ART’s charity number • 2004 - AR steps down, to lead ART • 2014 - Now ‘The Rivers Trust’, & still going…

Page 4: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The issues - droughts 76’ & 95’

Page 5: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The issues - eutrophication

Page 6: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The issues - open-cast pig mining!

Page 7: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The issues - high sediment loadings!

Page 8: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The issues – degraded, headwaters & WQ

• Fertilisers & chemicals, DDT, OP’s, PCB’s, Aldrin, Dieldrin, Atrazine, Paraquat

Page 9: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The issues – decline of salmon

Page 10: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The issues – changing farming practice

• Move from hay meadows - silage • Increased use of fertiliser & chemicals • Move from spring cereals - winter cereals • Introduction of maize - for livestock silage • Move from FYM - slurry based systems • Increased stocking rates & larger units • New heavy machinery

Page 11: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

In the beginning…

• 1989 - privatisation of 10 regional water authorities & formation of National Rivers Authority (until 1996 when Environment Agency)

• Prior to 1994 • South West Rivers Association established • Charity Commission turn down ‘Taw Fisheries Trust’ • Michael Martin – assembles working group • QC’s opinion sought • Stuart Gardiner summons Arlin Rickard!

Page 12: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Barriers to progress…

Page 13: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The Chairman

Page 14: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The trustees

• M D Martin - Chairman • The Lord Clinton • E Goldsmith • N A Grant • A G Hawken • M F Heathcoat -Amory • E J Hughes (later President) • D R W Silk • Mrs A Voss-Bark • W P Tucker • & later D J Hoare, R L Constantine, Sir Simon Day • with Stuart Gardiner & Ian Cook supporting

Page 15: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The idea…

• Scotland - influence of Tweed Foundation and later West Galloway Fisheries Trust

• A fisheries trust in England? ’Taw Fisheries Trust’ • Key elements:

• Applying ‘best science’ • The need to work with farmers & riparian owners • and the NRA • and the Water Company - South West Water • To work at a catchment scale • To address land use and ecosystem function ‘If you look after the land, the river will look after itself’

Page 16: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The idea.. was a fit for ‘The Ecosystem Approach’

Managing the environment is really about managing people…

Nature can usually manage itself…

Page 17: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The name…

• Taw Fisheries Trust?

• River Taw Trust / Foundation?

• South West Fisheries Trust?

• South West Rivers Trust?

• West Country Rivers Trust?

• Westcountry Rivers Trust (WRT)

Page 18: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The logo…

Page 19: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The ‘Westcountry Rivers Trust’ logo

Page 20: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

WRT launch event …

Mill on the Exe - with Ted Hughes • Press quote, 2.6.95 The new Rivers Trust is very concerned about the enormous pressures put upon our natural water resource, from abstraction, successive drainage schemes, an often increased sediment load and pollution. Arlin Rickard, the Trust’s Director explained “All of us are water users of one form or another. We must all take responsibility for past mistakes and learn how to protect our heritage. We intend to make a real difference on the ground, acting as catalysts and co-ordinating action for change. We will be active in vital areas often starved of funds, such as helping farmers to solve the problem of diffuse pollution.”

Page 21: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

My first task …

• Find some money! • For a big project • EU Objective 5b EAGGF • Enlisted help from:

• Prof Ed Maltby • Gordon Beilby • Clem Davies

• Tamar 2000 was born - £1.6m over 4 years • (with ingenious co-finance package)

Page 22: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The people - mentors & heroes all

• Stuart Gardiner - a determined administrator • Alan Hawken - constant and wise counsel • Michael Martin - inspiring and charming leader • Ted Hughes - charismatic and revered • Simon Evans - obsessive angler & fisheries biologist • Dylan Bright - a brilliant scientist • Ken Hill - gave us hope at SWW and later solid

support at WRT • Ian Gregg - established the Tweed Foundation &

later Eden Rivers Trust. First Chairman of ART • Today’s WRT bright young heroes! I salute you!

Page 23: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Simon Evans - gratuitous fish porn!

Page 24: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Simon Evans?

Page 25: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Education has always been central to our cause

Page 26: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Westcountry Rivers Trust – projects the first 10 years

• Tamar 2000 Project - £1.6m @50% (500 farms, 300 farm plans)

• Westcountry Rivers Project - £1.1m (340 farm plans) • Community Rivers Project - with focus on education • Cornwall Rivers Project - £1.8m @ 80% (666 farm plans) • Interreg Projects… • Churchill Fellowships - from Australia (Land-care) • Angling 2000 later ‘The Angling Passport’

Page 27: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

23/12/2014 27

River basin planning - incorporating wetland function

1. Basin Stream order

2. Wetland HGMU’s

3. Bio-regional plan

Tamar Catchment Draina

4 0 4 Kilometers

Floodplain 3Floodplain 2Floodplain 1Slope 5Slope 4Slope 3Slope 2Slope 1Catchment Boundary N

EW

S

Tamar Catchment Wetland Units

Page 28: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

23/12/2014 28

Targeted Bio-Regional Plan at a River Basin Scale

Plymouth

• Protect key wetlands, aquifers, headwaters and water supply reservoir sub-basins

• Target woodland planting & areas of permanent grass

• Buffer corridors for water transmission above abstraction points and to link up fragmented habitats

• Restore floodplain function & flood storage capacity

Deliver the land use strategy through a fully integrated sustainable river basin management plan, with agreed ecological targets

Consider: environmental and ecological service provision & “downstream” costs including aquifer recharge, abstraction, water quality, flood management, biodiversity, fisheries & Recreation • Target down to sub-basin scale

Page 29: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Westcountry Rivers Project (Taw /Torridge) completed July 2001 The Project has been completed on time, to budget and has met or exceeded all key targets. All physical works are either completed or nearing completion. 340 [target 333] Plans were provided for 22,768 [21,666] hectares of land 59.2 km of river bank is fenced, 73.4km river corridor has been regenerated 150km main river plus a further 253km tributary river has been protected under integrated management plans 7 wetlands have been restored 79 obstructions have been removed habitat improvements have been completed at 53 sites and 41 buffer zones have been established Three reports have been produced; the BDB report, the Wetlands report, and the Economic report.

Page 30: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Economic Report The Economic Report has predicted that the average net direct benefit of the WRT Project to farm-based businesses within the Taw/Torridge catchment is around £2,700 per business per year, with 80% of the benefits accruing to agriculture-related activities and 13% to tourism-related activities. This is equivalent to £27,000 per farm-business over the 10-year planning horizon, or £19,924 per farm-business if the stream of costs and benefits over the planning period are discounted at 6%. Based on the total direct costs and benefits of the Project, the study estimates a benefit/cost ratio of 8.6 over the 10-year planning horizon and ratio of 6.4 if the streams of costs and benefits are discounted at 6%. This indicates that the WRT Taw/Torridge Project is highly cost efficient. If net external benefits were also quantified, the expected benefit/cost ratio would demonstrate even greater social efficiency. Wetland Report The Partnership now has a Geographical Information System including wetlands in the two catchments and has generated spatial data in a mapping exercise carried out over some 1600km2 of land. Ten wetland types have been identified in the Taw and Torridge catchments and mapped as landscape-scale functional units. Wetland is considered to have occupied originally about 28 percent of the Taw and 37 percent of the Torridge catchments. Overall historic losses of wetland from both catchments are considered to be about 75 percent.

Page 31: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The vital interface between the competing need for water & food…

Soils… Soils… Soils

Page 32: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Westcountry Rivers Trust - Offices

WRT was launched literally from my front room at Bradford Lodge, Blisland, where it continued until 2001 when eventually we could afford offices at: • Lifton - offered by Anne Voss-Bark opposite the Arundell Arms • Exeter Street, Launceston • Rain-Charm House, Stoke Climsland • New Exeter offices recently opened

Page 33: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Some highlights…

• Working with brilliant young people • Each project won / each project completed • Ken Hill - sorting our ‘cash-flow’ • Paul Getty - sent us a cheque for £30k • The end of the foot & mouth outbreak (2001) • Tea with Prince Charles at Endsleigh • Tony Blair invite to No 10 • Visit by: Lord Rothschild with Duchess of Devonshire

& Candida Lycett-Green • Dylan’s work on genetics • Helping new rivers trusts to form & prosper • Working with our European partners

Page 34: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Association of Rivers Trusts

By 2001 there were 4 ‘rivers trusts’ operating in England;Tweed Foundation, Westcountry Rivers Trust, Wye & Usk Foundation, Eden Rivers Trust (later to be joined by the Ribble Rivers Trust). At an informal meeting on the banks of the Wye it was decided to ‘formalise’ our relationship and establish an Association of Rivers Trusts to share information, to develop and guide national policy and to help and support the development of new rivers trusts in England, Wales & NI Association of Rivers Trusts (ART) was launched with a ‘sister’ body in Scotland, Rivers and Fisheries Trusts of Scotland ‘RAFTS’

Page 35: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Introduction to The Rivers Trust

• Grassroots ‘bottom-up’ movement – ‘wet feet’

• Recognised as proven river basin ‘deliverers’

• Raising awareness and providing education

Page 36: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Introduction to The Rivers Trust

• Grassroots ‘bottom-up’ movement – ‘wet feet’

• Recognised as proven river basin ‘deliverers’

• Raising awareness and providing education

• Engaging people who own and manage resources – e.g. farmers, land & river owners, anglers, water companies…

• Empowering communities to take action and local “ownership”

• Forming powerful partnerships

• Developed strong European links

Page 37: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The Rivers Trust & Environment Agency

• In October 2006 the EA and ART (now RT) signed a strategic Partnership Agreement to facilitate joint working

• In 2012 this has been updated to a National MOU to promote local partnerships and develop projects incorporating WFD, Climate Change and Data Transfer

• RT also have MOU with N Ireland EA and the Loughs Agency • RT have agreed a set of working principles with NE

Page 38: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Rivers Trusts in England & Wales

• 50+ Rivers Trusts in England,

• Wales (Afonydd Cymru)

• & Northern Ireland

• 26 Trusts in Scotland - RAFTS

STOP PRESS: NI news… Erne Rivers Trust -announced

Page 39: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Rivers Trusts and EA ‘Management Catchments’

The Rivers Trust:

> 250+ technical specialists

> 20,000+ active volunteers

Active in every WFD River Basin District

Page 40: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Funds disbursed by RT to rivers trusts • 2004 - £14,682 • 2005 - £33,858 • 2006 - £44,022 • 2007 - £86,770 • 2008 - £272,347 • 2009 - £962,708 • 2010 - £1,116,418 • 2011 - £1,652, 477 • 2012 - £1,908,420 • 2013 - £934,618 • 2014 - £148,000* mid year estimate

Page 41: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

RT/ Defra River Improvement Fund

→ Contributing to WFD Good Ecological Status

→ Eel Regulation

→ Habitats Directive

Over 2,800* kms of rivers with improved ecological potential * source - Environment Agency GIA Master Programme

Page 42: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

RT / Defra River Improvement Fund

Page 43: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

RT / Defra River Improvement Fund

Page 44: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

RT / Defra River Improvement Fund

Page 45: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Catchment Based Approach (CaBA)

www.catchmentbasedapproach.org

Page 46: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

CaBA Framework

• Defra Policy Framework – ‘to encourage the wider adoption of an integrated CaBA to improving the quality of our water environment’

• Involving the 1st , 2nd & 3rd Sectors in partnership

• Establishment of Catchment Partnership Groups

• Development of Catchment Plans

• Contributing to WFD 2nd cycle

• Building capacity for delivery

Page 47: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

CaBA Partnerships

Page 48: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

CaBA Partnerships

Page 49: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

CaBA National Support Group

• Angling Trust • Freshwater Habitats Trust • Groundwork Trust • National Trust • RSPB • Salmon & Tout Association • The Rivers Trust • The Wildlife Trusts • Wildfowl and Wetland Trust • WWF • Water UK • Defra + EA, NE, CSF, FC

Page 50: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

CaBA Activity - Catchment Plan +

It’s really up to the Catchment Partnerships: • WFD • Bathing Waters • Flood Risk Management • Drinking water supply • Biodiversity 2020 • Fisheries management • Wider Ecosystem Services • Climate change resilience • INNS etc

Page 51: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

European Commission WFD Performance

Page 52: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Fisheries Management…

Dialogue with EA & Defra on enhanced partnership working: • Wild Fisheries Review - Scotland (RAFTS & DSFB’s) • Fisheries Review - Wales (NRW role) • General Election 2015 • EA Rod Licence Income

• EA target licence income 2013/4 - £22.79m • Based on sales of 1.239m licences • AT now leading on angling promotion & development

Page 53: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Existing rivers trust Schemes

• 8 schemes (including Anan) • 325 beats • 550 km’s of river • 125 km’s in inter-changeable

token schemes • 16 lakes

Page 54: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Back to the future? – over to Jonathan Thanks to the Westcountry Rivers Trust… • A new strand of civil society • One of the fastest growing environmental movements today • Leading exponent of catchment management & Paid

Ecosystem Services • Working in partnership with government and its agencies • Cost effective technical deliverers • Fisheries management specialists • European and international perspective

• Soca river - Slovenia • Rio Grande - Mexico

As our strap-line says; Where there’s water there’s life…

Page 55: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Do not lower your expectations!

Page 56: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

Very Merry Christmas to you all!

Page 57: The History of the Westcountry RIvers Trust

The Rivers Trust ‘the umbrella body of the rivers trust movement’

www.theriverstrust.org

www.catchmentbasedapproach.org

Thank You!