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Water Services National Training Group

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Title: Water Services National Training Group


1
Water Services National Training Group
  • 11th Annual Conference
  • 6th September 2007

2
Significant Water Management Issues
  • Colin Byrne
  • Water Inspector
  • Department of Environment, Heritage and Local
    Government

3
WFD Implementation Timetable in Irish
Regulations (SI 722, 2003)
4
EU Commission Implementation Report (2007)
  • Communication Towards Sustainable Water
    Management in the European Union (COM(2007) 128
    final)
  • Supported by Annexes 1) WFD 1st Implementation
    Report (SEC(2007) 362)
  • Snap-shot of the situation reported in 2004-2006
  • Based on reports from Member States
  • Assesses 3 components
  • Legal transposition into national law (Art. 24)
  • Administrative arrangements (Art. 3)
  • Environmental/economic analysis (Art. 5)

5
Implementation Results
  • Legal Transposition - 19 MS with major
    shortcomings
  • Administrative Arrangements
  • 110 different RBDs, 40 are international
  • gt60 of EU territory is international
  • RBD size between 1,000 and 800,000 km2
  • Economic analysis
  • Low level of information on cost-recovery in
    different sectors

6
TITLE
7
Implementation Results Article 3 arrangements
Results of performance assessment
8
Implementation Results Article 5 analysis
  • Overall performance Article 5



9
water matters
Have your say!
10
Water Matters
  • Significant Water Management Issues Report
  • Required by SI 722 of 2003 and Article 14.1 (b)
    of Water Framework Directive
  • Public consultation document
  • No format set down by regulations or EU
  • Opportunity to address the public in language
    they understand
  • Gives information and invites comment

11
Water Matters
  • Common template and timetable for NI and RoI
  • Each RBD produced their own report format and
    80 of content are common
  • Length
  • About 50 pages
  • How many issues?
  • 8 national issues
  • 2 or 3 local issues

12
Format of how issues are presented
  • How does the issue affect water quality?
  • What existing controls are in place?
  • Are these controls adequate to meet the new
    targets set by the Water Framework Directive?
  • What additional actions are proposed?

13

Groundwater
14
Rivers

15
8 Significant Water Management Issues of national
concern
  • Wastewater and industrial discharges
  • Other point sources
  • Agriculture
  • Unsewered properties
  • Forest and Water
  • Use and discharge of dangerous substances
  • Physical modifications
  • Abstractions

16
Wastewater and industrial discharges
17
Wastewater and industrial discharges
  • Background
  • 540 sewerage systems serving populations of 500
    1.7 million
  • 600 IPPC licenses granted by EPA
  • 1,090 discharge licenses to sewer 1,120 to
    water granted by local authorities
  • 2.3 billion invested (NDP 2000-2006) meeting 90
    of infrastructure needs
  • 2.5 billion estimated (NDP 2007-2013)
  • Potential impact on waters
  • Inadequate treatment organic load, nutrients
    and toxic substances
  • Pollution from urban wastewater Serious (1)
    60 33 P, 10 N

18
Wastewater and industrial discharges
  • Existing controls
  • Urban wastewater Urban wastewater treatment
    Regulations (1994-2004), Planning and Development
    Act (2000), Foreshore Act (1933)
  • Industrial and commercial IPPC Regulations
    (1994-2004) and Water Pollution Acts (1977, 1990)
  • Are existing controls adequate to meet WFD
    objectives ?
  • UWWT Controls focussed on infrastructure, not
    discharges. No prior authorisation system for
    discharges. Monitoring inadequate in places. New
    water quality standards are to be met
  • Industrial and commercial prior authorisation
    in place, but new emission limits, including
    dangerous substances. Need to be included in
    review of licence conditions to meet new water
    quality standards

19
Wastewater and industrial discharges
  • What additional controls are proposed?
  • New regulations creating single national
    licensing system for urban wastewater discharges
  • Administered by EPA
  • Licences will set mandatory emission limits to
    achieve new water quality standards
  • Licences will set compulsory monitoring
    requirements
  • Review and revision of IPPC and Water Pollution
    discharge licences to meet new water quality
    standards
  • Stakeholders affected Local authorities
    industries discharging to sewer or water

20
Other point sources
21
Other point sources
  • Background
  • EPA identified 86 contaminated sites (industrial
    sites, gasworks and illegal landfills)
  • 100 mines
  • 500 quarries
  • Incomplete knowledge about these sites
  • Potential impact on waters
  • Potential leakage of contaminants toxic
    substances such metals and fuel
  • Long term pollution of both groundwaters and
    surface waters

22
Other point sources
  • Existing controls
  • Waste disposal sites - Waste management act EPA
    licenses
  • Mines mining lease/license - DCENR, planning
    permission Local authority, IPPC licenses EPA
  • Quarries Planning and development act
    registration with local authority
  • Contaminated sites EPA and water pollution acts
  • Are existing controls adequate to meet WFD
    objectives ?
  • Controls adequate
  • Compliance and enforcement are the challenge
    e.g. recent actions to control illegal
    landfilling and cross border waste movement

23
Other point sources
  • What additional controls are proposed?
  • Unregulated waste disposal sites application of
    code of practice
  • Developed by EPA
  • Local authorities identifying and assessing sites
  • Quarries application of best practice
  • Developed by EPA
  • Local authorities identifying and assessing sites
  • Contaminated sites application of same best
    practice
  • Stakeholders affected Local authorities
    industries commercial enterprises and landowners
    on whose land such activities have taken place

24
Agriculture
25
Agriculture
  • Background
  • Two-thirds of Irelands land area - 90 grassland
    10 tillage
  • 6 of workforce
  • 2 of total added value
  • Beef, sheep and milk main exports 1.3 lu/ha
    average stocking density
  • Intensification of farm systems, less farmers,
    larger herd sizes, intensive agricultural
    enterprises
  • Potential impact on waters
  • Enrichment of waters nutrients
  • Organic pollution animal manure, silage and
    slurry
  • Also dangerous substances e.g. pesticides, oils
  • Pollution from agriculture Serious (14),
    Moderate (33), Slight (35)

26
Agriculture
  • Existing measures
  • European reform single farm payments / cross
    compliance DAF lead controls
  • Good agricultural practice regulations (2006)
    Nitrates Action Plan (NAP) and mini catchment
    programmes
  • REPS
  • Grant schemes for manure management (storage and
    spreading)
  • Also Water Pollution Acts, Phosphorus Regulations
    (Bye-laws etc) Local authority role
  • IPPC licenses intensive agricultural
    enterprises EPA role
  • Are existing controls adequate to meet WFD
    objectives ?
  • Controls are adequate to protect most waters
    subject to full compliance. More stringent and
    focussed measures may be needed in sensitive areas

27
Agriculture
  • What additional controls are proposed?
  • NAP will be reviewed in 2009 to ensure water
    quality improvements
  • Control and reporting of nutrient surplus (animal
    numbers, feedstuff and chemical fertilizers)
  • Observed reduction in animal numbers and
    fertilizer sales
  • Agri-environmental technologies and schemes are
    being considered. E.g. Digestors in intensive
    agricultural areas and riparian zone restoration
    in sensitive catchments
  • Stakeholders affected Agricultural sector

28
Unsewered properties
29
Unsewered properties
  • Background
  • 30 of the population are currently unsewered
  • Single dwellings, clusters of houses, commercial
    premises and light industries
  • One in five properties built since 1991 have
    septic tanks 100,000 homes
  • Galway, Roscommon, Donegal and Monaghan - highest
    rate of unsewered property development
  • One third of facilities inspected in Cavan in
    2002 were defective
  • Potential impact on waters
  • Nutrients, chemicals and microrganisms can seep
    into both groundwater and surface water
  • Contamination of drinking water sources (wells,
    rivers , lakes) if tanks and percolation systems
    are not working properly
  • Reduction of quality of bathing waters and
    shellfish waters

30
Unsewered properties
  • Existing controls
  • Planning system is the key control
  • DEHLG guidance on best practice to Planning
    Authorities
  • Guidance manuals published by the EPA which
    explain the investigation and design requirements
    for systems serving individual premises
  • Bye-Laws under the Water Pollution Acts
  • Are existing controls adequate to meet WFD
    objectives ?
  • Water quality problems where septic tanks or
    proprietary systems are not sited, managed and
    operated properly
  • EPA Guidance in draft (being updated)

31
Unsewered properties
  • What additional controls are proposed?
  • Updated EPA Guidance manuals for single houses
    and small scale developments.
  • Restrict development in areas vulnerable to
    groundwater pollution and significant flood risk.
  • Modify development plans.
  • Improve septic tank maintenance requirements
  • Provision of collection systems in areas of high
    septic tank density
  • Stakeholders affected Local Authorities, light
    industries, householders on single house systems
    or in clusters and practitioners

32
Forest and Water
33
Forest and Water
  • Background
  • 10 of Irelands land area to rise to 17 in
    next 30 years
  • Timber production mainly sawlogs, stakes, wood
    chip
  • 77 coniferous
  • 57 state owned managed by Coillte
  • Newer private forests - higher broadleaf
    proportions, harvesting in 20 years
  • Potential impact on waters
  • Acidification
  • Nutrient enrichment
  • Sedimentation
  • Flow pattern changes
  • Acute toxic events if pesticides not applied in
    controlled manner
  • Damage to sensitive protected habitats/wildlife

34
Forest and Water
  • Existing controls
  • Tree felling is subject to Licence under the 1946
    Forestry Act,
  • Forest Service is implementing Sustainable Forest
    Management (SFM)
  • Integrated Package of measures for practitioners
  • Irish National Forest Standard
  • Code of Best Forest Practice sets out best
    practice in all stages of the forest management
    cycle
  • Environmental Guidelines
  • Pesticides controlled by the Pesticide Control
    Unit of DAF
  • Are existing controls adequate to meet WFD
    objectives ?
  • Existing legislation, binding environmental codes
    of practice and guidelines play a major role in
    protecting water quality in forested areas
  • Revision of Forestry Act may be required
  • New Acid sensitive areas protocol required

35
Forest and Water
  • What additional controls are proposed?
  • The key is to ensure implementation of guidelines
    and codes of practice.
  • Introduce more stringent actions, established by
    scientific evaluation, in the most sensitive
    areas
  • (e.g. phased felling to limit sediment input,
    prior establishment of buffer zones)
  • For new forest plantations key action Avoid
    aforestation of sensitive areas Strict
    adherence to statutory regulations, water
    protection guidelines and codes of practice.
  • Stakeholders affected forestry sector both
    publicly and privately owned as well as the
    associated saw-milling and processing industries

36
Use and discharge of dangerous substances
37
Use and discharge of dangerous substances
  • Background
  • Used across all sectors of society
  • Households, industry, forestry, agriculture,
    small businesses, mines, construction sites,
    water treatment, run-off from roads and paved
    areas and engine exhausts
  • Increased usage
  • Register of these substances incomplete
    (Commission has identified candidate list of
    2,042 substances! )
  • Potential impact on waters
  • Direct toxicity
  • Some are persistent and bioaccumulate

38
Use and discharge of dangerous substances
  • Existing controls
  • Water quality standards (15 metals, pesticides,
    solvents, P)
  • Monitoring programmes
  • Emission controls - IPPC licenses, EPER (European
    Pollution Emission Register), Seveso Directive,
    Water Pollution Act, Dangerous Substances
    Phosphorus Regulations, Pesticides
    Authorisations, Aquaculture Licenses
  • Are existing controls adequate to meet WFD
    objectives ?
  • Increased range of substances to be controlled at
    European and Member State level new water
    quality standards to be established
  • Licensing, authorisation and monitoring systems
    will require updating to address the new water
    standards

39
Use and discharge of dangerous substances
  • What additional controls are proposed?
  • New water quality standards in WFD classification
    Regs. (Dec. 2007)
  • Proposed Directive for Priority Substances
    (initial 41 substances)
  • EPA proposed new standards in July 2007 (18
    substances)
  • New regulations licencing WWTP discharges
  • Review and revision of IPPC and Water Pollution
    discharge licences
  • REACH (Registration, Evaluation and Authorisation
    of Chemicals)
  • Pesticides strategy
  • Stakeholders affected Local authorities,
    industries and commercial activities producing,
    using, handling, storing or discharging to sewer
    or water

40
Physical modifications
41
Physical modifications
  • Background
  • Water supply, navigation, shipping, flood
    protection, hydropower and land drainage
  • 95,000 culverts and bridges
  • 900 km of river flood embankments
  • 19 large reservoirs
  • 10 large ports
  • 200 km of coastal defences
  • Potential impact on waters
  • Direct impact on habitat drained rivers loss
    of spawning habitat, physical barriers
    obstacles to migration, hard structures loss of
    habitat
  • Damage to protected areas (e.g.
    habitats/wildlife)

42
Physical modifications
  • Existing controls
  • Statutory roles OPW arterial drainage, DCENR
    coastal defences
  • Planning and development act Local authorities
  • Foreshore act disposal of dredge spoil permits
    - DCENR
  • Are existing controls adequate to meet WFD
    objectives ?
  • No single comprehensive control system for
    surface water modifications
  • Registration and authorisation system is needed
  • New monitoring programmes required to identify
    impacts and sites requiring restoration

43
Physical modifications
  • What additional controls are proposed?
  • New regulations for prior authorisation
    (licensing regime) / registration systems are
    being considered for significant modifications
  • WFD provides for exemptions where a water is a
    Heavily Modified Water Body (HMWB). Only if
    benefits outweigh impact no other alternatives
  • Stakeholders affected Developers operators
    proposing engineered modifications to surface
    waters

44
Abstractions
45
Abstractions
  • Background
  • Household, agriculture, recreation, industry
  • 1.7 million cubic metres of water used per day
  • 85 of the population is supplied by public
    schemes
  • 550 surface water schemes and 2,000 groundwater
    wells (gt10m3/day)
  • Potential impact on waters
  • Over-abstraction reduced flow rates and levels,
    saline intrusion
  • Resulting impact on aquatic wildlife
  • fringing wetland protected habitats
  • Fish populations and their migration

46
Abstractions
  • Existing controls
  • Water Supplies Act 1942 sanitary authorities
    may abstract water from surface water sources
    (subject to approval from An Bord Pleanala)
  • Approvals
  • Historical water rights agreements for individual
    water supply schemes
  • Local planning approval systems for new schemes
  • S.I. No. 93 of 1999 EC Regs (EIA)
  • gt2 Million m3/yr
  • EPA Act 1992
  • IPPC industries can be required to submit
    details of any impacts
  • Exempted - S.I. No. 86 of 1994 LG (planning
    dev) regs
  • Class 40 - boreholes for domestic supplies
  • Class 41 temporary boreholes (except for
    mineral prospecting)

47
Abstractions
  • Are existing controls adequate to meet WFD
    objectives ?
  • Abstraction registers need to be completed and
    brought up-to-date
  • Consistency in granting of licenses is lacking
  • Additional monitoring needed
  • Approval process needs to include new
    environmental objectives
  • What additional controls are proposed?
  • New regulations for single national licensing /
    registration systems are being considered for
    significant abstractions
  • Inventory of abstractions
  • Licence consents based on water resource impact
  • Abstraction limits (quantity and timing)
  • Monitoring requirements
  • Stakeholders affected Local authorities,
    industrial and commercial enterprises, the
    agricultural sector and developers proposing
    abstractions

48
River Basin Management Process
Prevent deterioration At least good status by
2015 Protected area objectives Most stringent
applies !
49
Guidance on setting Objectives
  • DEHLG will specify methods and criteria for
    setting objectives within the rules of the WFD
  • The Guidance will recommend how the improved risk
    assessments currently being updated by the RBD
    projects are to be used to assist in the setting
    of objectives
  • This will result in planned improvements through
    POMs where we are confident that
  • An EQS supporting good status or a protected area
    objective is not being achieved, or
  • Trend analysis indicates that deterioration of
    status will occur unless action is taken

50
First step fully implement existing 11
Directives
51
Implement new basic measures and supplementary
measures (where necessary)
52
The contribution of basic measures to achieving
the objectives
  • We know what the Basic Measures are!
  • Goal is to implement them fully, consistently and
    effectively
  • There are specific programmes to give effect to
    directives (e.g. WSIP, Nitrates National AP)
  • To ensure maximum effect water bodies must be
    prioritised within each programme, based on risk
  • Such prioritisation must be evidence based,
    transparent, proportional, manage uncertainty and
    most of all make sense
  • The final priorities must be based on
    consultation and have regard to stakeholders
    views (Public authorities, RBDACs, sectoral
    interests)

53
What next ?
  • Publication and consultations on SWMI Overview
    consider submissions when developing RBMPs
    (June-December 2007)
  • National guidance to public authorities on River
    Basin Management Planning - December 2007
  • Commence the setting of objectives through a
    transparent process
  • Implement the existing directives in full
  • Introduce new controls identified in the overview
    of SWMI
  • Identify appropriate supplementary measures where
    necessary

54
Thank you for your attention
55
Water Services National Training Group
  • 11th Annual Conference
  • 6th September 2007
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