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Matter for Decision: |
Response to the
Emerging Water Resources Regional Plan for Eastern England |
Why the decision had to be made
(and any alternative options):
|
Water Resources East (WRE) are carrying out consultation on the emerging Water
Resources Regional Plan for Eastern England between 17 January and 28 February
2022. WRE are planning for sustainable
and resilient water resources for the next 50 years and beyond. The Water Resources Management Plans
produced by the water companies in this region will need to be in line with
the Regional Plan. For further information, see
the emerging Regional Plan, the non-technical summary and the WRE press release. The Regional Plan will be a key document
for the Greater Cambridge Local Plan.
In the First Proposals, the Councils were clear that the preferred
option for growth was contingent on there being evidence as the plan progresses
that an adequate water supply would be available to meet the development
needs identified without unacceptable environmental harm. Therefore, it is important that the
Councils put forward their views on the emerging Regional Plan and the
potential solutions to providing water supply in the future. This is the first consultation on the
regional plan. It sets out the scale
of the water deficit in the region and the reasons for this, which relate to
growth, climate change, the needs of the agri-food and energy sectors, and an
increasing allocation for the natural environment. The plan focuses on: · Demand management
including reducing leakage and per capita consumption. · New sources of water
supply including large infrastructure options (>10 Megalitres/day (Ml/d)) such as reservoirs, transfer, desalination,
effluent re-use. · ‘Local’ non-water company
and smaller (<10Ml/d) water company infrastructure projects and schemes. · Possible water
innovations and exemplars which could be supported or facilitated. Appendix 1 to this decision sets out the
proposed responses to the questions posed by WRE in the consultation. The purpose of this decision is to agree
the responses so that they can be submitted before the deadline as a joint response
from Cambridge City Council and South Cambridgeshire District Council. Appendix 1 can be viewed at the link
below: Document
Meeting 22.03.22 - ROD Emerging Water Resources Regional Plan Consultation
Response - Cambridge Council WRE will use the results of the
consultation to develop the Draft Plan which will be subject to another round
of consultation in Autumn 2022 and the final plan is expected in 2023. Officers are also carrying out ongoing
engagement with WRE, the water companies and the Environment Agency to
support the development of the Local Plan. |
The Executive Councillor’s decision(s): |
To confirm that the consultation response
set out in Appendix 1 of this decision should be made to the emerging Water Resources Regional Plan for
Eastern England. |
Reasons for the decision: |
To provide the views of Cambridge City Council
and South Cambridgeshire District Council on the emerging Water Resources
Regional Plan for Eastern England because future water resources will be a
key issue for the Greater Cambridge Local Plan. |
Scrutiny consideration: |
The Chair and Spokespersons of the Planning and
Transport Scrutiny Committee were consulted on this matter. |
Report: |
Appendix 1 –
Cambridge City Council and South Cambridgeshire District Council response to
the Emerging Water Resources Regional Plan for Eastern England (January 2022) Appendix 1 can be viewed
at the link below: |
Conflicts of
interest: |
None known.
|
Comments: |
The following comments were received from Cllr Bick (Opposition
Spokes, Liberal Democrats):
i.
This broadly goes in the right direction.
ii.
Although the point is made that demand management measures alone will
only suffice in the interim and that supply measures (as referred to in A1)
will be needed to accommodate the anticipated growth, we would like to see
this even more clearly emphasised in answers to the later questions.
iii.
It seems to us that it would be likely to assist WRE if our input
could also map out the implications of growth and its timing in both our
current local plan and our embryonic new local plan, in terms of phased
demand management goals on the one hand and supply infrastructure on the
other. It seems at present that the challenge is not properly calibrated into
needed milestones of change and is still being conducted at a level of
generality. Comments were received from Cllr S Davies (Opposition Spokes, Green
and Independent).
i.
I would like the Council's response to be unequivocal about the fact
is that "current levels of abstraction are causing environmental
damage" (letter from the Environment Agency to Monical
Hone, 7/8/2020 https://twitter.com/MonicaHone/status/1291720198312132615?s=20&t=EC4LxZyAJG6J2jNJCLoWrw) Hence, this is not an
issue relating to some future period in time, this is with us already.
ii.
In this context, the description in the draft response that
water "could be a potential ‘show stopper’ to economic and
housing growth in Greater Cambridge" and the request that water supply
"be put in place in a timely way to support growth"
significantly underplay both the immediacy and the severity of the situation,
as we are already in deficit.
iii.
I hope you recognise the depth of the concern felt by the Green &
Independent group councillors about this issue. The Planning Policy Manager, Jonathan Dixon, acknowledged the
comments. In response to the comments a number of amendments were
incorporated into the final response and agreed by the Executive Councillor
for Planning Policy and Transport. |