3 Feb
05 -Bid
To Stop Silt Dumping - Torpoint Journal 20-01-05
AMID calls from
environmentalists and local campaigners to halt the dumping of
dredged materials from the River Tamar in Whitsand Bay, South East
Cornwall MP Colin Breed has discovered that even more could be
destined for the area. Last Wednesday the Shadow Fisheries Minister,
Own Paterson MP, was at Rame Head, meeting local campaigners who
want the dumping stopped.
In Mr Breed's correspondence with Elliot Morley, Government Minister
from the Environment and Agri-Environment, it has been revealed that
the current licence held by the Royal Naval Dockyard at Devonport
allows for the dumping of only 50,533 tonnes of material which
expires on February 17, this year.
It has been revealed that DEFRA is now considering an application
for the disposal of a further 201,527 tonnes of dredged material
during the rest of 2005, nearly four times the amount currently
allowed.
'This area is already overfull from previous
dredging which have contaminated the area and killed off much of the
marine wildlife,' said Mr Breed. 'We need some kind of explanation
from DEFRA for this dramatic increase and I shall be pressing the
Minister on this immediately.'
A group of residents, anglers and divers explained the damage which
is being done to the sea bed and marine life at Whitsand Bay to the
Shadow Minister who expressed deep concern at what he heard, and
from the pictures he was shown taken by local diver Dave Peake. His
visit to the area had been arranged by Rame County and District
Councillor Sheryll Murray. The MP was accompanied by SE Cornwall
Tory Prospective Parliamentary Candidate, Ashley Gray who described
Mr Peake's pictures, plus a film he had taken as 'a video nasty I
won't forget'.
Mr
Gray said the concerns of the fishermen and environmentalists have
been proved right.' I am very pleased the Shadow Minister has been
able to talk to local people about this environmental catastrophe.
The dumping must now stop to allow the bay to regenerate.' Cllr
Murray said the Shadow Minister was shocked by the destruction he
saw on film to such a beautiful area. 'Generations to come will not
forgive us unless action is taken now,' she said. According to local
knowledge the dumping of silt in Whitsand Bay from the Tamar has
been going on for at least a century, but it intensified after the
introduction of the RAFT project (Remote Ammunition Facility Tamar)
when a licence was given by MAFF, followed by DEFRA, for the dumping
of 500,000 tonnes of silt. The project, which cost £25million, has
since been abandoned. However, the dumping is still continuing under
licence. Mr Peake, a former Torpoint police sergeant, and police
diver for 14 years, has been diving in Whitsand Bay for 45 years and
says he has witnessed a definite deterioration on the sea bed in his
lifetime. He says it is littered with other rubbish dredged up with
the silt for dumping, plus waste materials dumped there from the
Dockyard going back years, before the licence was brought into play.
He said bits and pieces from the
dumping were regularly washed up at Polhawn Cover at the eastern end
of Whitsand and at Queener Point near Rame. 'I have been trying to
bring my concerns before different organisations such as the
Environment Agency and others, but all roads always lead me back to
DEFRA,' said Mr Peake. 'Because my hobby is underwater photography
and I have the time to do it now I am retired, I have the proof on
film of the damage that is being done.
It is incredulous that this is going
on right next to the World Heritage Site around the sunken Scylla
and the Egan Lane.'
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