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Non-Departmental Publication (Guidance and Regulation)
Environment Agency

Mar. 26 2024

Source Page: Renew a water abstraction licence
Document: Renew a water abstraction licence (webpage)

Found: Renew a water abstraction licence


Written Question
Agriculture: Water Abstraction
Monday 15th April 2024

Asked by: Ben Lake (Plaid Cymru - Ceredigion)

Question to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs:

To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, what assessment his Department has made of the potential merits of making provision of data on water use rates a requirement for agricultural water licences.

Answered by Robbie Moore - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs)

The Environment Agency regulates water abstraction in England. The information provided therefore relates to England only.

The Environment Agency assesses water use for agriculture as part of the abstraction licence application process both when it first grants an abstraction licence and at renewal. The Environment Agency uses the following guidance to assess water need and use rates: Optimum use of water for industry and agricultural dependent on direct abstraction - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk).

The Environment Agency already receives information about how much water is used under abstraction licences in England. All ‘full’ abstraction licences must include requirements to measure or assess the amount of water abstracted. Licence holders must keep a record of how much water they abstract available for inspection. Licences that authorise the abstraction of 100 cubic metres per day or more must also send a return to the Environment Agency of how much water they have abstracted. The Environment Agency uses this information to assess compliance with licences and the environmental effects of abstraction. It also uses information about past usage to determine whether a time limited abstraction licence should be renewed on the same terms or for example have its quantities reduced.

The Environment Agency collates information about abstraction from all sectors and makes it available to Defra in a report called ‘ABSTAT’. The Environment Agency is currently producing an update to the ABSTAT report and will provide it to Defra in due course.

Defra and the Environment Agency are working to move the water resources licensing regime into the Environmental Permitting Regime (EPR). Under EPR, abstraction data will become public register information.


Written Question
Water Abstraction: Licensing
Monday 15th April 2024

Asked by: Ben Lake (Plaid Cymru - Ceredigion)

Question to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs:

To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, what plans he has to reform the abstraction licensing regime in England.

Answered by Robbie Moore - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs)

As set out in the Plan for Water, Defra and the Environment Agency are undertaking a programme of changes to modernise abstraction licensing in England. We are working to move the water abstraction licensing system into the Environmental Permitting Regime. This will provide a modern, consistent and flexible legal framework upon which the management of abstraction can be developed to meet the needs of today and the future.

Alongside the legislative changes, the Environment Agency is modernising its digital systems to maximise the opportunities the new legislation provides. This will bring new functionality to improve the way abstraction is managed, including a water abstraction eAlerts system which provides notifications directly to farmers. As the environment and our climate changes, the Environment Agency is adapting its policies in response. The Environment Agency has recently produced a regulatory position statement setting out how flood water can be abstracted for the benefit of abstractors but ensuring that the environment is protected.

The Environment Agency is also undertaking a refresh of the National Framework for water resources, which looks at how best to manage water resources across England. Through this, abstractors from all sectors will come together to identify water needs and the best way of meeting them.


Departmental Publication (News and Communications)
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs

Dec. 29 2023

Source Page: Thames Water Teddington direct river abstraction: Section 35 Direction, Planning Act 2008
Document: Teddington Direct River Abstraction Section 35 Direction (PDF)

Found: Thames Water Teddington direct river abstraction: Section 35 Direction, Planning Act 2008


Departmental Publication (News and Communications)
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs

Dec. 29 2023

Source Page: Thames Water Teddington direct river abstraction: Section 35 Direction, Planning Act 2008
Document: Thames Water Teddington direct river abstraction: Section 35 Direction, Planning Act 2008 (webpage)

Found: Thames Water Teddington direct river abstraction: Section 35 Direction, Planning Act 2008


Written Question
Water Abstraction: Licensing
Wednesday 7th February 2024

Asked by: Julian Knight (Independent - Solihull)

Question to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs:

To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, whether his Department holds data on the number of water abstraction licences that have been issued by the Environment Agency in each year since 2015.

Answered by Robbie Moore - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs)

The number of new water abstraction licences that have been issued by the Environment Agency (EA) in each year since 2015 is as follows (the data set may not be complete for December 2023):

Year

Number of abstraction licences

2015

931

2016

815

2017

931

2018

815

2019

1357

2020

1014

2021

377

2022

369

2023

536

Grand Total

7145

In addition to issuing new licences, the Environment Agency also processes applications to vary, revoke, reduce, lapse, vest, apportion and transfer abstraction licences. Under the Water Resources Regulatory Regime, as well as abstraction licences the EA also processes impoundment licence applications. In total the EA has processed 13,844 applications since 2015.

The number of water abstraction licences issued each year varies due to the number of time limited licences that are due to expire in each year. If a licence holder wants to continue to abstract water after the date the licence expires, they must apply to the EA to renew the licence.

New regulations came into effect on 1 January 2018 to improve the management of water resources and to ensure protection of the environment. Licensing exemptions that previously allowed the use of water from ground or surface water sources without the need for a licence were mostly removed. This process is known as New Authorisations. Between 1 January 2020 and 31 December 2022, the EA issued 1,322 New Authorisations licences. These are included in the table above.


Written Question
Agriculture: Water Abstraction
Monday 15th April 2024

Asked by: Ben Lake (Plaid Cymru - Ceredigion)

Question to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs:

To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, what recent steps he has taken to improve the collection of data in agricultural water use.

Answered by Robbie Moore - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs)

The Environment Agency regulates water abstraction in England. The information provided therefore relates to England only.

The Environment Agency’s ‘Managing Water Abstraction Service’ enables abstraction licence holders to submit records of how much water they had taken electronically rather than on paper. The Environment Agency estimates quicker, and easier submission of returns data digitally saves abstractors £247k each year. Some 95% of returns now come into the Environment Agency digitally.

Defra is working on rolling out a Water Farm Practices Water Survey involving crop types and volumes of water used. This will be an extension of the annual farming practices survey, which provides a snapshot of the farming landscape across England. It will give an opportunity to update data last collected in 2010 on agricultural water management.

Natural England is this week due to report on its latest phase of Catchment Sensitive Farming water advisory visits in the Southwest of England.

As part of the Prime Minister’s commitment at last year’s Farm to Fork Summit Defra has funded an agriculture project on supply demand balances which have been piloted in Cambridgeshire and will be rolled out to wider parts of England. The water data from this work will be used to update the next round of Regional Water Resource Plans on agriculture water requirements (together with the Environment Agency’s Water Resources National Framework which will be published next spring). A sister project funded by Defra will also include agriculture water use data to assess and screen local resource options (such as reservoirs and rainwater harvesting) to help groups of farmers improve their water resilience.


Departmental Publication (News and Communications)
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs

Dec. 29 2023

Source Page: Thames Water Teddington direct river abstraction: Section 35 Direction, Planning Act 2008
Document: Defra decision letter (PDF)

Found: Thames Water Teddington direct river abstraction: Section 35 Direction, Planning Act 2008


Departmental Publication (News and Communications)
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs

Dec. 29 2023

Source Page: Thames Water Teddington direct river abstraction: Section 35 Direction, Planning Act 2008
Document: Teddington Direct River Abstraction Project Section 35 Statement (PDF)

Found: Thames Water Teddington direct river abstraction: Section 35 Direction, Planning Act 2008


Departmental Publication (News and Communications)
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs

Dec. 29 2023

Source Page: Thames Water Teddington direct river abstraction: Section 35 Direction, Planning Act 2008
Document: Accompanying letter from Thames Water (PDF)

Found: Thames Water Teddington direct river abstraction: Section 35 Direction, Planning Act 2008