EA warns farmers to check if they are using more water than allowed

Farmers have been warned to comply with rules on taking water following a number of unlicensed abstractions found in Devon and Cornwall during routine farm inspections, the Environment Agency said. 

Farmers have been warned to comply with rules on taking water following a number of unlicensed abstractions found, Environment Agency said. 
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Many farms rely on their own private water supply from springs, wells and boreholes. How much water is being taken is unmonitored – meaning farmers could be unknowingly breaching the allowed limit for abstraction without a licence, EA said. 

Lisa Best, agriculture team leader for the Environment Agency in Devon and Cornwall, explained: “All landowners should know how much water they are abstracting and ensure they have the relevant licence if needed.   

“Abstracting water without the necessary licence or in breach of your licence conditions is an offence and could lead to enforcement action.   

“Taking 20,000 litres of water a day is enough to wash over 100 cars. Taking more water than you are permitted could impact on other users and damage the environment.” 

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Abstraction licences

The EA controls how much, where and when water is abstracted through its licensing system. Anyone taking 20m³ of water per day or over is required to have an abstraction licence.  

EA farm inspectors have issued 70 actions to farmers over the past two years to install a meter to monitor how much water is being taken and apply for a licence where it is clear one is needed.  

Abstraction licences have conditions on them to ensure the environment and the rights of other abstractors are protected.  

A spokesperson for EA added: “Our powers and duties enable us to regulate the use of water under existing licences and to decide whether to grant new ones. Where abstraction is damaging the environment, we also have the power to amend or revoke existing licences.   

“Climate change and population growth means there will be less available water with a greater demand for it. By 2050, the amount of water available could be down by 10-15%, with some rivers seeing 50-80% less water during the summer months.  

“We all need to protect the environment by reducing the amount of water we use and ensuring greater efficiency in its use and re-use.” 

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