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Displaying items by tag: killing of fish
The Angling Trust has learned that the Environment Agency has granted licences to the Small Hydro Company, working with British Waterways, for two hydropower plants on the river Trent at Sawley and Gunthorpe which allow up to 100 fish – including eels – to be killed at each of two plants in any 24 hour period.
While this  doesn’t suggest that the Environment Agency (EA) is directly licensing the  killing of fish, it appears to allow the developers to keep generating even  where fish are being killed – except where they exceed the 100 mark in 24  hours. The licence also allows up to 10 game fish to be killed in a 24 hour  period before the turbines are stopped. Eels are particularly vulnerable to  turbines because of their length and their ability to get through screens  designed to protect fish (see picture).
  
European eel  stocks are at an all time low. In response, the Environment Agency has recently  banned anglers and commercial eel fishermen from taking eels, and on the Trent  there is a ban on any eels being taken above the tidal limit at any time. In  this context, the Angling Trust finds this decision to allow so many fish to be  sliced up in hydropower turbines in a year perverse. In 2005, only 140 Kg of  silver eel were caught in the lower Trent for the whole year; these turbines  could legally destroy a far greater number.
The hydro  schemes also sit uneasily with the UK government’s obligations under various EU  laws which require the EA to protect and enhance fisheries, including the Water  Framework Directive.
Mark Lloyd,  chief executive of the Angling Trust said “We have a situation here where one  EA Department has introduced measures to protect the eel, which we support, and  another department has given permission for a development which could see eels  and other fish slaughtered in massive numbers. Could government be any less  joined-up? Hydropower developments should not be licensed to kill; they must be  designed so that they don’t damage fish and their habitats.”
Alan  Butterworth, technical director at the Angling Trust added: “Current research,  and a Europe-wide working group on eels, recommends a screen gap of no more  than 15mm to safeguard migrating silver eels, and the Agency's own hydropower  Good Practice Guide stipulates 12.5mm for the type of turbine to be used at  Gunthorpe and Sawley. The screens proposed have a 20mm wide gap, which would  allow eels to enter the turbine channel where they are at risk of being  mutilated or killed.”
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