1 / 13

The Don Catchment as an Opportunity Facilitating Answers to ICM Dr. Jonathan Hillman

The Don Catchment as an Opportunity Facilitating Answers to ICM Dr. Jonathan Hillman. Catchment Management Process (Porter). Customers Consumer Council for Water. Standards and Policy Defra/EU. Economic Regulator OFWAT. Quality Regulator EA, DWI, Natural England. Water Companies

tryna
Télécharger la présentation

The Don Catchment as an Opportunity Facilitating Answers to ICM Dr. Jonathan Hillman

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Don Catchment as an Opportunity Facilitating Answers to ICM Dr. Jonathan Hillman CSC 6 February 2008

  2. Catchment Management Process (Porter) CSC 6 February 2008

  3. Customers Consumer Council for Water Standards and Policy Defra/EU Economic Regulator OFWAT Quality Regulator EA, DWI, Natural England Water Companies Water resources Wastewater treatment CATCHMENT MANAGEMENT NGO’s RSPB, NFU, ART etc Public Sector Councils CSC 6 February 2008

  4. The Many Faces of the River Don…. CSC 6 February 2008

  5. RBMP’s & POM’s might affect…….. • New development (flooding, water resources) • Discharges (eg. licensed, point source) • Diffuse pollution (urban, agricultural) • Abstraction (eg. Water supply, agriculture) • Agricultural land use (nutrients, agrochemicals) CSC 6 February 2008

  6. Don for the Environment Agency • Interpretation, guidance, research • SCALE! Implementation at local to national level • Monitoring • Identification of HMWBs, AWBs • Target setting • Development of programmes of measures • Economic analyses • Preparation of RBMPs • Challenges of delivery CSC 6 February 2008

  7. Don For Flood Risk Management • WFD objectives: no deterioration, achieve good status, contribute to mitigating the effects of floods and droughts … … • SMPs • CFMPs • Strategies, schemes CSC 6 February 2008

  8. Don for Regional and Local Authorities • Planning aspects: • Regional Spatial Strategies • Local Development Frameworks • Development control decisions • Local authority as developer or resource manager: • Highways (development; diffuse pollution) • Coast protection (development) • Parks/open space, land-use, access • Water Cycle Strategies CSC 6 February 2008

  9. Don for the Water Industry • R&D, implementation • Monitoring • Strategic planning, • Consent conditions • Costs of delivery • Challenges • New development CSC 6 February 2008

  10. Assessment of Small, Rural WwTW’s? CSC 6 February 2008

  11. Key Messages • Each sector has a contribution to make in terms of delivering WFD/ICM objectives. • Need to ensure a fair, proportional response from each sector • Decisions – including POMs – need to be sustainable and based on good science • Opportunity to review and improve POMs based on on-going research as past of RBMP cycle CSC 6 February 2008

  12. Summary • ICM is high on the radar, but needs careful consideration • Integrated data is needed for regulatory requirements, RBMP’s, POM’s, CFMP’s, Water Cycle Strategies • Integrated data is complex! DSS can help, but need to be applied carefully • Increased conceptual understanding of potentially fragile, but less well understood systems (e.g. hyporheic zone will help • Such data will guide revisions to RBMP’s, investment decisions and help operational planning CSC 6 February 2008

  13. Thank youscottwilson.com CSC 6 February 2008

More Related