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Author Topic: Monmouthshire and Brecon Canal - water shortage, March 2025  (Read 146 times)
Chris from Nailsea
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« on: March 27, 2025, 13:23:29 »

From the BBC» (British Broadcasting Corporation - home page):

Quote
Fears 19th Century canal could start to run dry in days



There are fears one of Wales' most popular canals could start to dry up within a week, prompting calls for the Welsh government to intervene.

Operators of the 225-year-old Monmouthshire and Brecon Canal have warned of an "urgent" water shortage without the prospect of imminent rainfall.  It comes amid debate over how the historic attraction should secure its water supply in future after limits were placed on taking water from the environmentally sensitive River Usk.

The Welsh government said any arrangement between the Canal & River Trust and Welsh Water would be a commercial decision in which it should play no role.

The 35-mile (56 km) waterway weaves its way through the Bannau Brycheiniog National Park - formerly known as the Brecon Beacons National Park - and the Blaenavon industrial landscape World Heritage Site, attracting an estimated 3 million visitors a year for boating, walking and cycling.

"Everything the canal supports is at threat - we risk losing the jewel in the crown of south Wales," said Tracey Leake-Jones, who runs the Bridge 46 to Five Locks canal group.  Made up of volunteers, the group runs events along the canal and has fundraised to install planters, benches and signs.  The prospect of it having to close due to water shortages was "utterly devastating", she said.  "There has to be a solution found, and my view is that the Welsh government and its leaders are the only people who can bring all the main players together."

She pointed to new housing estates being built along the canal with the waterway used as a marketing tool, and said the local council hoped to be able to open up further stretches down to Cwmbran, describing the economic benefits as "unimaginable".  "Should we have problems with water supply then what's going to happen to those plans for restoration that we've all been working on for the past three years?"

News broke of the difficulties facing the canal in a letter sent to local businesses by Glandŵr Cymru, external, the Canal and River Trust in Wales, in February.  It explained the canal, which once transported iron and coal to Newport docks, had relied on funnelling water from the River Usk and its tributaries which accounted for 80-90% of its water supply.

Recent changes in legislation, designed in part to protect rivers in the face of climate change, means licences are now required, restricting the amount of water that can be taken.  Last year, Glandŵr Cymru lost an appeal against some of the conditions stipulated by environmental regulator Natural Resources Wales (NRW» (Network Rail Western - about)).

The River Usk is a designated special area of conservation protected by law due to its importance for rare wildlife including the Atlantic salmon, which is threatened with extinction from Wales.

"The canal took around 30% of the total flow of the river in 2022 - which was the last dry year period," said Gail Davies-Walsh, chief executive of Afonydd Cymru which represents river groups across Wales.  Limits on abstraction were needed to ensure the species and habitats had sufficient water to survive "particularly during dry summers and low flow periods," she said.



Mark Evans, director of Glandŵr Cymru, said the trust accepted it could no longer continue to abstract water from the Usk at the same level as it had in the past.  But recent dry weather highlighted the urgency of finding an alternative supply, he said.  "The amount of water we can take is starting to really concern us," he explained.  "It's urgent today, looking at the forecast for the next week.  At some point we'll have to stop the boats from using the locks," he warned, adding that both the canal's users and its wildlife would be impacted as levels fell.

Discussions have been taking place in recent weeks with Welsh Water over whether it could help to support the canal during periods of prolonged dry weather.  But this would come with "financial implications" and the potential of having to pay commercial rates for the water, resulting in a considerable bill the charity could not afford, he claimed.

(Article continues)


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Mark A
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« Reply #1 on: March 27, 2025, 15:55:20 »

Does this have the makings of being an artificially created and thoroughly nineteenth century crisis? It's as if some organisation's identified an income stream up for grabs.

Water levels on the Usk at Brecon for the year to March '25 to be found on the link below. The levels will be slightly representative of the flow and it would be useful to know the extent to which the canal's put a dent in *that*. Even though leisure use of canals results in the demands on their water supply peaking during the dry months, I'd not expect the locks of the Mon and Brec to be exactly thrashed whether in summer or any other season.

Mark

https://rivers-and-seas.naturalresources.wales/Station/4286?parameterType=1
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