Working with Local Authorities – what does it mean to us? TdBD May 2009.
What the WFD will mean for local authorities November 2007
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Transcript of What the WFD will mean for local authorities November 2007
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What the WFD will mean for local authorities
November 2007
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Contents
TimetableGuidance on RBMPWQ classification & proposed EQS’s POMS studiesHow the Plan might affect LA’s.
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ID Task Name1 Competent Authorities / RBDs (Article 3)
2 Characterisation (Article 5)
3 Classifications systems (Article 8)
4 Programme of Monitoring (Article 8)
5 RBMP work programme (Article 14)
6 Monitoring operational (Article 8)
7 Overview of significant issues (Article 14)
8 Draft RBMP (Article 14)
9 Environmental Objectives (Article 4)
10 Programmes of Measures (Article 11)
11 Published RBMP (Article 13)12 Water Pricing Policy
H2 H1 H2 H1 H2 H1 H2 H1 H2 H1 H2 H1 H2 H1 H2 H1 H2 H1 H2 H12001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
WFD Timetable (SI 722, 2003 to be amended )
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CIS 2010 Reporting Sheets • RBMP CIS reporting sheets (final draft) – May 2007
• Agreed in principle by Water Directors – Dresden June 2007
• RBMP 1 - Summary description of river basin management plan
• POM 1 - Summary of steps and measures taken to meet the requirements of Article 11
• SWM 3 - Results of surface water monitoring programmes (status of surface water bodies)• SWO 1 - System for classification for surface waters• SWO 2 - Use of exemptions in surface waters
• GWM 2 - Results of groundwater monitoring programmes (status of groundwater bodies)• GWO 1 - Classification systems established for groundwaters• GWO 2 - Use of exemptions in groundwaters
• Reporting sheets define general reporting content
• Detailed description and specifications will be part of technical implementation (shemas – due mid-2008)
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Under Article 4(3) of the Water Policy Regulations, 2003 the Minister for the Environment, Heritage and Local Government may issue guidance and general policy directions in relation to the implementation of the Regulations
Who is the guidance directed at?• The guidance is particularly directed at local authorities, EPA and other public authorities
with the aim of providing practical steps to be taken to work towards effective delivery of the objectives in a co-ordinated way within individual river basin districts.
• In particular the steps needed to be taken by local authorities, EPA and other public authorities to align the objectives of regional guidance, county development plans (and their constituent Local Area Plans), Water Services Strategic Plans, other pollution reduction and/or control programmes (e.g. forestry programmes, farm inspections, review of IPPC licenses etc) with the stated objectives of river basin management plans are outlined.
RBMP - A Practical Guide for Public Authorities
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Local authority roles
• producing the River Basin Plan,
• securing the implementation of measures such as the provision of adequate wastewater infrastructure,
• checking compliance with the Nitrates Action Programme,
• reviewing and revising discharge licences under the Water Pollution Act (1977) to take account of the EQS contained within the surface water classification regulations (SI XX, 2007),
• realigning planning policy in line with water policy within the provisions of the Planning and Development Act (2000).
RBMP - A Practical Guide for Public Authorities
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River Basin Management Process
Monitor water bodies
Classify their “status”
Default Objectives
This is a complex process ! What objectives apply ?Which pressures ?What are key risk factors ?What are technical options ?What are the most cost effective measures ?What is a realistic timeframe for implementation ?
Set Objectives
Programmes of Measures
Implement
Review performance
Prevent deteriorationMaintain high statusProtected area objectivesMost stringent applies !
Restoration to at least good status by 2015
Source: Dr C Byrne DEHLG
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Min Objective
ECOLOGICAL STATUS
HIGH
GOOD
MODERATE
POOR
BAD
Quality
Standards Slight
No orminimal
Moderate
Major
Bad
Status Classification
Good Status = Good ecological status & good chemical status
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Status Classification
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Element Parameters River Lake Transit. MarinePhytoplankton Composition, abundance and biomass Y Y Y
Macrophytes Composition and abundance of aquatic flora Y Y Y Y
Invertebrates Composition and abundance of benthic fauna Y Y Y Y
Fish Composition, abundance and age structure Y Y Y
Status Classification – Environmental Quality Standards
Conditions Parameter Rivers Lakes Transitional CoastalThermal Temperature
DO
BOD
Acid pH
Ammonium
DIN
MRP
Total Phosphorus Nutrient
Ireland
Oxygen
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Status Classification – Environmental Quality Standards
Proposed standards for 11 Specific Relevant Pollutants in the ROI:• Chromium Cypermethrin• 2,4-D Diazinon• Dimethoate Linuron• Mecoprop Phenol• Glyphosate Mancozeb• Monochlorobenzene
Retain SI 12 of 2001 standards for 7 Specific Relevant Pollutants:• Arsenic Copper• Cyanide Fluoride• Toluene Xylenes• Zinc
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River Basin Management Process
Monitor water bodies
Classify their “status”
Default Objectives
This is a complex process ! What objectives apply ?Which pressures ?What are key risk factors ?What are technical options ?What are the most cost effective measures ?What is a realistic timeframe for implementation ?
Set Objectives
Programmes of Measures
Implement
Review performance
Prevent deteriorationMaintain high statusProtected area objectivesMost stringent applies !
Restoration to at least good status by 2015
Source: Dr C Byrne DEHLG
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Programme of measuresSchedule of POMS Studies & Lead RBDs
Leading RBD Measures & Standards Study Name
WRBD 1. On-site Wastewater Treatment Systems2. Forest and WaterHigh status sites
ShRBD 3. Freshwater MorphologySERBD 4. Setting Chemical Water Quality Standards SWRBD 5. Industrial & Municipal Regulation
6. Dangerous Substances 7. Marine Morphology 8. Heavily Modified Water Bodies & Artificial Water Bodies9. Water Balance Model for Setting Chemical Water Quality Standards
ERBD 10. Abstraction Pressures11. Groundwater Risk from Diffuse Mobile Organics12. Urban Pressures in rivers, transitional and ground waters13. Further Economic Characterisation
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Programme of measures
Focussed supplementary measures where basic
measures not enough
Other prescribed
basic measures e.g. New controls on dangerous
substance discharges, abstractions and physical modifications
Source: Dr C Byrne DEHLG
Bathing Water Directive(76/160/EEC)
Birds Directive(79/409/EEC);
Drinking Water Directive
Major Accidents (Seveso) Directive
Environmental Impact Assessment Directive
Sewage Sludge Directive
Urban Waste-water Treatment Directive
Plant Protection Products Directive
Nitrates Directive
Habitats Directive
The Integrated Pollution Prevention Control Directive
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These plans are to be reviewed/realigned to ensure default objectives are delivered
• Section 4 & 16 discharge licences (Water Pollution Act, Local authorities) – to reflect Surface Water Classification Regulations, 2007
• IPPC licensing (EPA) – to reflect Surface Water Classification Regulations, 2007• Forestry Regulations (Forest service) and Forestry Action Plans• County Development Plans – modified to address issue of one-off housing and septic
tanks. The planning code will be critical to safeguarding protecting areas and preventing deterioration. Potential use of safeguard zones for DWPAs
• The WFD prescribes a number of additional new regulations such as controls on dangerous substances, abstractions and physical modifications, which will contribute further towards full achievement of objectives.
• Provision is also made for additional voluntary supplementary measures (e.g. fiscal instrument, rehabilitation projects)
• Such measures will be limited and will likely be focused on sensitive/protected areas (where confidence is high that additional measures will deliver objectives)
Programme of measures
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Programme of measures
Paramount - Protected areas and protection of good/high status waters must be addressed. Thereafter, critical factors should be taken into account in prioritising waterbodies for restoration under the various programmes and plans;• The current status of water body (Distance to
target)• Critical risk factors (e.g. current scale of
pressure, performance of wastewater treatment facilities, pollution pathway factors such as surface water run-off risk, groundwater vulnerability)
• The predicted trend in pressures causing failure by 2015
• The technical challenge of implementing the necessary work on the ground in time for 2015.
• Costs ?
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RBMP - Template
2010 report to Minister & commissionMarch 2010
Agencies“publish”
RBD draft Plan December 2008RBD final PlanAugust 2009
RBD Consultants
& Agencies
Background Information (POMS, class etc)December 2008
RBD Consultants
& Agencies
Plan Report Tool
Dec 08/Aug 09
WISEInformationMarch 2010
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Water Matters – Help Us Plan!• The style and contents of the draft plan will follow from the contents of the SWMI
booklet “Water Matters – Have your Say”, so that members of the public will be familiar with the messages and issues discussed.
• The template for the draft plan will set out the proposed contents of the published draft plan, a reporting tool and a series of background documents which will be available electronically fulfilling the Annex 7 and 2010 reporting sheet requirements.
• The main focus of the draft plan will be on the programme of measures to address each of the basin’s water management issues; how these programmes have been prioritised and where exemptions have been made.
• An electronic webtool will allow the public to visualise a waterbody and see which measures apply, what its status and objectives are, etc.
• Background documents will address the detailed requirements of responding to the 2010, 2005 sheets & WISE reporting.
RBMP - Template
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Water Matters – Help Us Plan!• The draft plan will take on board DEHLG Planning guidance (in prep.) and any
other relevant guidance or input from UK TAG members’ guidance, SWMI reports or templates.
• Any weaknesses or significant gaps identified in the current suite of SWMI consultation exercises will also be highlighted in the draft plan.
• Key stakeholders will be consulted about how to deliver the plan’s messages.• The template will be agreed by the NS WFD Co-ordination group by December
2007.• Ideally, professionally edited, generic text for one international basin would be
provided (around 60 pages in length) which would be available for other basins to customise.
• The NS WFD Co-ordination group will be responsible for technical document sign off (proposed May 2008). NI ministerial and advisory council sign off processes will follow (publication December 2008).
RBMP - Template
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River Basin Management Process
Default objectives
Economic & technical feasibility criteria
Project VisionEconomic profiles RBD Plan
Report Visualiser
WISE Data & Reporting Information
LIMS/LabinfoMonitoring data
Status ToolWB Status
GISRegister of Protected Areas
GISWBs / Pressure layers etc
EMS Progress Tracker
GIS (15 POMS Studies)Revised Risk Assessments
15 POMS StudiesBasic & supplementary measures
15 POMS StudiesPrioritisation process RBD Review
& Consultations
POM for each WB
Exemptions for each WB
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Plan Reporting Tool
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Plan Reporting Tool• TYPOLOGY – text eg an upland river in an alkaline area etc• PROTECTED STATUS – Reg of Protected Area tick list table (citation text?)• MONITORING SITES – table of sites within the waterbody with co-ords, code,
programme (S/O/I), list of status elements measured & who monitors• STATUS – table of overall WFD status and sub elements (Annex 5) - eg rivers
biology, morph, hydro, phys-chem and overall chemical, date status calculated– should a history be presented or is 2007 baseline to be added to?– should full chemical status be presented or a summary listing failures?
• DEFAULT OBJECTIVES – table stating default objective and recording any modifications (ie exemption or revised timescales)
• POMS – tick list table (based on simplified 2010 format) – SWMI topic and key measures themes for each (eg WWTP/CSO upgrade, industrial license
review, landfill study, SSRS/farm survey, septic tank restrictions, forestry restrictions, dang subs monitoring, abstraction license, reduction programme, morph restoration action, planning restrictions, aliens)
– Also need the by who and when
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River Basin Management Process
Monitor water bodies
Classify their “status”
Default Objectives
This is a complex process ! What objectives apply ?Which pressures ?What are key risk factors ?What are technical options ?What are the most cost effective measures ?What is a realistic timeframe for implementation ?
Set Objectives
Programmes of Measures
Implement
Review performance
Prevent deteriorationMaintain high statusProtected area objectivesMost stringent applies !
Restoration to at least good status by 2015
Source: Dr C Byrne DEHLG
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Local Authority Actions
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Local Authority Actions MIR - New national licensing system for WWTS & licence reviews • LAs will be required to obtain licenses for treatment plants, secure WSIP resources for
upgrades and undertake review of all Section 4 and 16 industry discharge licenses and undertake enforcement regarding the industrial licences
Other Points - Controls adequate. Compliance + enforcement critical• LAs will be required to complete registration and risk assessment of these facilities, where
necessary secure resources for remedial measures and to undertake enforcement activitiesAgriculture - NAP adequate. But review in 2009. Sensitive areas• LAs will be required to undertake SSRS investigations in at risk/impacted catchments to
assess NAP compliance, with follow-up farm surveys and where necessary to undertake pollution enforcement activities
Septic Tanks - Guidance. Identify high risk areas + modify development plans• LAs will be required to align land use policy, secure resources for sewering priority areas and
where necessary to undertake pollution enforcement activitiesForestry - Guidance. Prohibit afforestation in high risk areas• LAs will be required to align land use policy and where necessary to undertake pollution
enforcement activities
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Local Authority ActionsDangerous Substance - New water quality standards + inclusion in discharge licences• As MIR - LAs will be required to undertake review of all Section 4 and 16 industry discharge licenses
and undertake enforcement regarding the industrial licences – further LA activities are likely to become licensed in future for example CSO’s weed spraying etc
Morphology - New national registration & licensing system + guidance• Likely lead role to EPA however LAs may be required to undertake licensing of small activities, include
morphology considerations in the planning approvals processes and in priority areas secure resources for restoration measures, LAs may also be required to apply for morphology licenses for their own schemes
Abstractions - New national registration & licensing system + guidance• Likely lead role to EPA however LAs may be required to undertake licensing of small activities and
apply for abstraction licenses for major schemesProtected areas – Enforcement of Plans and where necessary land use control• LAs will be required to align land use policy and where necessary to assess development applications
in designated catchmentsAdditional activities • Educational awareness programmes – in support of all significant issues• Response to the local issues eg alien species as identified in the SWMI.
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