The Management Plan

 

What is a Catchment Management Plan?

A catchment management is a report that explains what the various issues on the catchment are and will detail how we are going to work together to deal with these issues and improve the wider catchment area.

How will we write the plan?

We will identify the various users and stakeholders of the Bristol Avon Catchment and draw out all the various issues that affect the water course. These issues could be anything related to the use of the catchment from water abstraction for irrigating crops, to pollution sources, to the protection of habitats for wildlife, to a boating club wanting better access to the water’s edge. We will then use existing data, as well as the results of consultation and surveys from all the relevant groups, organisations & people to decide what the content of the plan should be.

Why do we want a plan?

We want to focus effort to where it’s most needed i.e. the issues that cause the most damage.

We want to try to develop new ways of working on the issues that should help really deal with the problems by using new ways of thinking or new solutions.

We want to communicate better with all the various individuals, groups and organisations, so we know what is already happening and what action is in the pipeline to improve the catchment environment.

What next?

The CMP will be finished by the end of this year (2012). The plan will provide details of what management will be done by whom and when over the next 3 years so we will be ready for action on the ground in 2013!


 

Main Issues

The Steering Group identified what they think are the main issues in the Bristol Avon Catchment, these are listed in no particular order.

1. Abstraction

2. Sediment loading

3. Agricultural runoff (phosphates, nitrates & biocides)

4. Sewage Overflow/missed connections

5. Poor species range and abundance of fish

6. Treated Sewage Outlets

7. Flooding

8. Highly Modified Channels

9. Road Runoff

10. Invasive Non-Native Species

11. Debris (natural & synthetic)

12. One off pollution events

13. Poor riparian habitat

14. Conflicts between different user groups

15. Lack of strategic, co-ordinated governance & communication

16. Lack of general awareness of the catchments status and the services it provides

17. Drought

18. Fly Tipping

19. Lack of co-ordinated ambition for water environment in shaping our physical landscapes & recognising its contribution to good health


Poll

Do you agree with this list

Yes
(59)
79%

No
(16)
21%

Total votes: 75


Topic: The List of Issues

Date: 07/05/2013

By: Justin Milward, Woodland Trust

Subject: Poor Riparian habitat

Although we do not disagree with the list of issues, we suggest that it could be made even better if native woodland management and creation is offered as a positive delivery tool for both water quality and flow issues.

The Woodland Trust believes that trees and woodlands can deliver a major contribution to resolving a range of water management issues. They offer opportunities to make positive water use change whilst also contributing to other objectives, such as biodiversity, timber & green infrastructure - see the Woodland Trust publication Woodland actions for biodiversity and their role in water management (pdf) - https://www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/en/about-us/publications/Pages/ours.aspx.

In addition, a joint Environment Agency/Forestry Commission publication Woodland for Water: Woodland measures for meeting Water Framework objectives states clearly that: ‘There is strong evidence to support woodland creation in appropriate locations to achieve water management and water quality objectives’ (Environment Agency, July 2011- https://www.forestry.gov.uk/fr/woodlandforwater). This is most readily realisable at a Catchment scale.
Most recently, the Government’s Independent Panel on Forestry (Defra, Final Report, July 2012) has emphasised these benefits by stating that:
‘One of the many benefits of woods and trees is their ability to help us respond to a changing climate, better enabling us to adapt to future temperature increases. We know that trees, in the right places, help us to adapt to climate change by reducing surface water flooding; reducing ambient temperature through direct shade and evapo-transpiration; and by reducing building heating and air-conditioning demands. A landscape with more trees will also help increase the resilience of our rural areas, by reducing soil erosion and soil moisture loss. Improving the condition
of existing woodlands, and the creation of a more resilient ecological network of associated habitats, will help wildlife adapt to climate change and other pressures’. This has been endorsed by the response in the recent Government Forestry Policy Statement (Defra Jan 2013) with the key objective (p.23) ‘Work with other organisations and initiatives to support the further development of markets in forest carbon and other ecosystem services such as water and biodiversity’, together with a Cumbria case study (p.22 - SCaMP) on water benefits from woodland creation.

Woodland can help adaptation strategies cope with the high profile threats to water quality and volume resulting from climate change. The Forestry Commission’s publication, The Case for Trees in development and the urban environment (Forestry Commission, July 2010), explains how: ‘the capacity of trees to attenuate water flow reduces the impact of heavy rain and floods and can improve the effectiveness of

Trees can also reduce the likelihood of surface water flooding in urban situations too, when rain water overwhelms the local drainage system, by regulating the rate at which rainfall reaches the ground and contributes to run off. Slowing the flow increases the possibility of infiltration and the ability of engineered drains to take away any excess water. This is particularly the case with large crowned trees. Research by the University of Manchester has shown that increasing tree cover in urban areas by 10 % reduces surface water run-off by almost 6%. (Using green infrastructure to alleviate flood risk, Sustainable Cities - www.sustainablecities.org.uk/water/surface-water/using-gi/).

• The South West Forestry Framework Implementation Plan 2009-2012 (Forestry Commission, 2009) contains two key actions – “2.4: Undertake pilot projects using new planting or woodland management to manage river flows and contribute to Water Framework Directive objectives” and “2.5: Develop projects to demonstrate and monitor benefits of riparian planting in reducing river temperatures”.

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