News Categories
Other stories in Water
- Sewage powered car hits streets of Bristol
- Competition Commission allows Bristol Water to increase bills by 15 per cent over five years
- Scottish regulator seeks views on customer participation
- Competition Commission ruling on Bristol 'will encourage companies to gear up'
- Ofwat considers bulk water sales at unregulated prices
Tagcloud
abstraction, AEP, anaerobic digestion, Anglian Water, Australasia, Benelux, BG Group, bil, billing, bills, biomass, Bristol Water, British Energy, British Gas, budget, Business Stream, call centres, carbon, carbon capture, CCWater, Centrica, CHP, climate change, coal, competition, complaints, connections, Conservatives, Consumer Focus, consumer research, cost of capital, credit crunch, customers, Cyprus, Czech Republic, debt, Decc, Defra, defra, Denmark, Department of Energy and Climate Change, distributed generation, Dong, drainage, Drax, Drinking Water Inspectorate, drought, e, Eastern Europe, eco-towns, economy, Ed Miliband, EDF, EDF Energy, effic, Efficiency, efficiency, electricity, electricity distribution, electricity generation, electricity retail, electricity transmission, Eligible households should automatically get £80 refund on energy bill, emergencies, emissions, emissions trading, ENA, Enel, Energy, energy, energy distribution, energy efficiency, energy generation, energy policy, energy retail, Energy retail, energy security, energy services, energy storage, energy suppliers, energy supply, energy transmission, engineering, Eni, environment, Environment Agency, Eon, ERA, ESB, Essent, Eurelectric, Europe, European Commission, European Union, finance, Finland, flooding, France, fuel poverty, gas, gas distribution, gas retail, gas storage, gas supply, gas transmission, gas transport, Gazprom, GDF Suez, geothermal, Germany, health and safety, Heat, heat, hom, hometop, Iberdrola, ice, industrial relations, infrastructure, Infrastructure Planning Commission, innovation, interruptions, IP, Ireland, Italy, jobs, leakage, legal, LNG, maintenance, metering, Morrison, MPs, National Grid, NEA, Netherlands, NI Water, NIAUR, NIE, NIE Energy, Nordic, Northern Gas Networks, Northern Ireland, Northumbrian Water, Npower, nuclear, offshore, offshore wind, Ofgem, ofwat, Ofwat, Ombudsman Service, operations, ownership, pan-utility, Parliament, people, planning, po, policy, politcs, politics, pollution, poverty, pri, price review, pricing, protest, quality, re, regulation, renewables, research, Russia, RWE, Scotia Gas Networks, scotland, Scotland, Scottish and Southern Energy, Scottish Power, Scottish renewables, Scottish Water, security of supply, selling, Severn Barrage, Severn Trent, Severn Trent Water, sewerage, skills, smart grids, smart metering, smart meters, solar, South West Water, Southern Water, Spain, st, storage, streetworks, sustainability, Switzerland, tariffs, Thames, thames water, Thames Water, trading, unbundling, Unison, United Utilities, utility engineering, Vattenfall, vehicles, Veolia, w, waste management, wastewater, wastewater treatment, water, Water, water @homefeatured, water abstraction, water and energy policy, water distribution, water efficiency, water neutrality, water resources, water retail, water supply, water treatment, water uk, Water UK, weather, Welsh Power, Welsh Water, Wessex Water, Wics, wind, WWU, Yorkshire Water, zero-carbon development
< £60 million to get eco-homes off the ground | EC proposes new framework to manage risk of networks failure >
Slug pellet chemicals risk UK failing EU water directives
The UK could risk failing the Drinking Water Directive and Water Framework Directive because of high levels of chemicals found in slug pellets.
Water firms recently started monitoring Metaldehyde levels in drinking water supply catchments - and found in some areas the levels breach the EU drinking water limit for pesticides.
The Environment Agency (EA) is urging farmers, the pesticides industry, the Drinking Water Inspectorate (DWI) and the Chemicals Regulation Directorate (CRD) to address the issue.
Slug pellet manufacturers have formed an alliance in response, the Metaldehyde Stewardship Group (MSG), which aims to give advice to agriculture and find out just how the chemical is getting into water.
The EA says there is no certainty the MSG will reduce contamination within the required timescale. It wants industry-led action and analysis of mitigation measures by key regulators, including the DWI and CRD, completed within the next 12 months to meet the WFD.

Comment on this story
Sign up to our free email newsletters