Farm Business Update 2014: Abbots Ripton, Anglian Water and drinking water

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Farm Business Update 2014 presentation of Anglian Water taken from the Abbots Ripton Event.

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Farming and drinking

water

Simon Eyre

Source Protection Manager

Anglian Water

Farm Business Update

19th February 2014

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Farming and drinking

water

• Water quality update

• Role for catchment approaches

• Current initiatives

• What does it mean for you?

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Water company water supply areas

Anglian Water –

• 4.3m customers

Essex & Suffolk Water –

• 1.8m customers

Affinity Water –

• 3.3m customers

Cambridge Water –

• 315,000 customers

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Water company obligations

• To supply ‘wholesome’ water

• Meet stringent drinking water

quality standards

• Find a balance of solutions for

each affected treatment works, at

a cost acceptable to customers

and economic regulator

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Where are we now?

Key water quality issues

• Pesticides – metaldehyde,

clopyralid, propyzamide,

carbetamide

• Nutrients – nitrate, phosphorus

• Sediment

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Where are we now?

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Where are we now?

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The role for catchment approaches?

• Will need to use all available options

• Treatment –

• Ion exchange (nitrate removal)

• Ozonation & Granular Activated Carbon

• Abstraction management –

• Limited scope

• Blending –

• Nitrates, pesticides

• Catchment management……….

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Abstraction management

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Current initiatives / projects

• Safeguard Zones

• Possible mitigation measures

• Risk mapping

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Safeguard Zones

• Areas where land use is known to reduce water quality

in rivers used for drinking water supply

• Actions targeted to improve water quality

• www.wiyby.co.uk

Extract from WIYBY

Abbots Ripton

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Possible mitigation measures

Cultural controls Responsible use

Reduce usage

Reduced active ingredient formulations Non-metaldehyde products

Biobeds

Rural SuDS Buffer strips Instream treatment

WRc report – Oct 2013

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Assess the Risk: Slug trapping

Actions for Winter OSR:

• Trap to assess slug activity just before, or after, cereal harvest

• Use trap catches, weather and cultivation data to assess slug damage risk

• Cultivate to reduce risk of slug attack

• If risk is high, broadcast slug pellets as soon as possible after drilling

• Monitor crops throughout the early susceptible growth stages

Traps key to assessing risk and

need for pellets

HGCA Topic Sheets on

Integrated Slug Control:

• Winter Wheat No.84

• Winter Oil Seed Rape No.85

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Risk mapping

• Field scale risk –

• Soil type

• Slope

• Distance from water

• Modify advice and

metaldehyde use in higher

risk areas

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What does this mean for you?

• Check if you farm in a drinking water catchment

– www.wiyby.co.uk

• Follow Tried & Tested, MSG & VI best practice advice

– www.nutrientmanagement.org www.getpelletwise.org.uk

– www.voluntaryinitiative.org.uk

• Consider field by field risk on your farm –

• Test slug pressure by trapping

• High run-off risk = cracking clay soils, under-drains, sloping

fields, bordered by ditches & watercourses

• Consider additional measures in highest risk fields

• Don’t forget the farmyard

• CSF / water company adviser help available

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Any questions?

Contacts:

Anglian Water – Simon Eyre – seyre@anglianwater.co.uk

Essex & Suffolk Water – Claire Lorenc – claire.lorenc@nwl.co.uk

Affinity Water – Alister Leggatt - alister.leggatt@affinitywater.co.uk

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