EU Water Directive Could Revolutionize Farming

Sept. 13, 2002
Governments across Europe may be forced to revolutionize farming in their countries in the face of a new European Union directive to dramatically raise the quality of river water, scientists said.

The water framework directive that must be transposed into national law across the 15-nation bloc by the end of 2003, sets tough new limits on the level of pollutants permitted in rivers and groundwater that will force land use changes, they said.

"Farmers are going to have to retreat," Simon Harrison of Ireland's University College Cork told reporters at the British Association for the Advancement of Science's Annual Festival being held at the University of Leicester.

Penny Johnes of the University of Reading said watercourses across Britain were far more heavily polluted than indicated by official government statistics that tended to paint an unrealistically rosy picture of water quality, Reuters reported.

"In the last decade of the 20th century, 95 percent of British fresh water was polluted by nutrients -- most of which was from diffuse sources -- in other words farming," she said.

"British waters are highly degraded in terms of nutrient pollution. We need to change land use," Johnes added.

She said point source pollution from factories or spills was fairly well under control, but that leaching from farmland had barely been touched because it was far more complex and difficult to tackle.

In many instances the problem was due to inappropriate or overly intensive land use that either led to local flooding of towns and villages because flood plains had been drained and rivers diverted or meant heavy run-off of pollutants.

"Current farming methods are not sustainable," Johnes said.

Harrison said the picture was being repeated across Western Europe. "If you want to have nice rivers there are going to have to be some changes in agricultural practices," he said. "This is a Europe-wide problem."

Johns said farmers were being encouraged by subsidies to over-produce food that was then being dumped on world markets.

What was needed was a new system to encourage them to be custodians of the land rather than plunderers of it.

She said it was not a matter of tearing down industrial agriculture and returning to a pristine past. That was neither practical nor desirable.

But setting a water quality benchmark that harked back to the less intensive farming practices before World War II could be a sensible option.

"We must handle this sensitively. We are only just coming out of mad cow disease and foot-and-mouth, she said.

"There aren't any simple solutions and there aren't any easy solutions. It may mean large scale changes in the way we behave," she added. 

Source: AP

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