The Angling Trust and its partners in the Our Rivers Coalition met with Environment Minister Huw Irranca-Davies by the Thames on Wednesday ahead of the publication of controversial plans for the UK’s waterways.
Earlier this  year, a report revealed that three quarters of rivers in England and Wales are  failing European targets on environmental quality. But in the majority of cases  the Environment Agency’s official plans – due to be published next month - fail  to set out action to tackle the problems such as pollution from fertilisers and  over abstraction, which threaten river wildlife.
  
The Our  Rivers Campaign was set up by the Angling Trust, the Association of Rivers  Trusts, the RSPB and WWF UK, to help encourage people who know and care about  their local river to fill the gaps in understanding.
In an attempt to persuade him to make last minute changes to the plans,  campaigners met with Mr Irranca-Davies by the bank of the Thames to hand over a  map of all the rivers adopted by supporters, river action groups and MPs during  the campaign.
Mark Lloyd,  chief executive of the Angling Trust said “The Water Framework Directive  presented the Environment Agency with a once-in-a-generation opportunity to  transform our rivers and the way that they we manage water, and the land around  it.
"But the  draft plans are lacking in ambition, they fail to capture the knowledge of  anglers and others who have an intimate knowledge of their rivers and much of  the information in them is simply incorrect. These new plans don’t even offer a  vision of what we would like to achieve, let alone how we might achieve it. If  Government fails to make significant changes before the plans are published,  they will have blown it. Anglers are dismayed”.
 
“The problems  are plain to see – pollution killing fish and causing algae and weed to choke  our water ways, river beds drying up, invasive species like signal crayfish  destroying riverbank ecosystems and more besides,” said RSPB conservation  director Mark Avery.
“These plans  are supposed to provide a blueprint for bringing the standard of our rivers up  to an acceptable level, but there is so much vital information missing it’s  difficult to have confidence in them. The whole publication is like a crossword  with most of the clues missing – and unless changes are made now we will never  get the solutions that our ailing rivers so desperately need.”
Arlin  Rickard, director of the Association of Rivers Trusts, said: “Our members were  asked to feed into these plans with positive proposals for how to deal with the  many environmental problems our rivers are struggling against.
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