Farmers urged to comply with rules on taking water

Environment Agency A water meter with a number of dials.Environment Agency
Climate change and population growth are raising concerns over water supplies

Farmers are being urged to ensure private springs, wells and boreholes are legally compliant to prevent potential environmental damage.

Farm inspectors were finding "a lot of unlicensed abstraction" in Devon and Cornwall during routine inspections and 70 enforcement actions were issued over two years as a result, said the Environment Agency (EA).

The warning comes as climate change and population growth mean there will be less available water with a greater demand for it in the future, said the EA.

By 2050, the amount of water available could be down by 10 to 15%, with some rivers seeing 50 to 80% less water during the summer months, it added.

Licence breach

The EA said the 70 actions it issued required farmers to install a meter to monitor how much water was being taken, and apply for a licence where "it is clear" one was needed.

"Abstracting water without the necessary licence or in breach of your licence conditions is an offence and could lead to enforcement action," said Lisa Best, agriculture team leader for the EA in Devon and Cornwall.

Anyone taking 706 cubic feet (20 cubic metres) of water a day or more is required to have an abstraction licence.

"Taking more water than you are permitted could impact other users and damage the environment," said Ms Best.

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