Dernière minute
FRAvion russe intercepté en mer de Norvège, Zelensky exhorte l'OtanFRNantes: Le service mortuaire du CHU en grève face à la surmortalité et aux conditions de travailFRFrance : Les pompiers volontaires appelés à la rescousse face aux feux de forêtFRCanicule : l'agriculture française face à des conséquences "inédites"FRCédric Jubillar passe aux aveux dans une lettre manuscrite à son nouvel avocatFRL'Ukraine intensifie ses frappes sur le territoire russe, ciblant les infrastructures énergétiquesCRYPTO-FRL'Afrique du Sud lance un audit massif sur les cryptomonnaiesFRFunérailles d'Ali Khamenei : une prière d'adieux marquée par l'absence de son filsFRMexique : les "mères chercheuses" luttent contre l'oubli pendant la Coupe du MondeFRBrésil éliminé de la Coupe du Monde : la déception à RioFRAvion russe intercepté en mer de Norvège, Zelensky exhorte l'OtanFRNantes: Le service mortuaire du CHU en grève face à la surmortalité et aux conditions de travailFRFrance : Les pompiers volontaires appelés à la rescousse face aux feux de forêtFRCanicule : l'agriculture française face à des conséquences "inédites"FRCédric Jubillar passe aux aveux dans une lettre manuscrite à son nouvel avocatFRL'Ukraine intensifie ses frappes sur le territoire russe, ciblant les infrastructures énergétiquesCRYPTO-FRL'Afrique du Sud lance un audit massif sur les cryptomonnaiesFRFunérailles d'Ali Khamenei : une prière d'adieux marquée par l'absence de son filsFRMexique : les "mères chercheuses" luttent contre l'oubli pendant la Coupe du MondeFRBrésil éliminé de la Coupe du Monde : la déception à Rio
Newsgather
BackRiver campaigner threatened with prosecution for illegal cleanup
River campaigner threatened with prosecution for illegal cleanup
En développement
Guardian UK17.06.2026Environment3 dk okumaUnited Kingdom

River campaigner threatened with prosecution for illegal cleanup

L'essentiel

  • Paul Powlesland, a lawyer and environmental campaigner, faces prosecution by the Environment Agency for illegally cleaning a section of the River Roding without a permit.
  • He organized volunteers to remove 200 bags of rubbish, branches, and silt over 10 days.

Résumé généré par IA

Pourquoi c'est important

Paul Powlesland organized volunteers to clean the River Roding after the Environment Agency failed to act on repeated requests. The agency is now investigating him for illegal intervention.

Taille de police

A river campaigner who organised a cleanup of his local waterway is being threatened with prosecution by the Environment Agency for acting illegally.

Paul Powlesland, a lawyer and environmental campaigner, organised a team of volunteers to tackle the removal of litter, weed and silt from a section of the River Roding, after repeatedly asking the agency to act.

The team of volunteers from the River Roding Trust removed 200 bags of rubbish, branches and silt over 10 days from Alders Brook, a tributary of the river that runs through rural Essex and Barking, earlier this year. But the EA has sent Powlesland a letter saying he is being investigated for illegally intervening without a permit.

“We consider that unpermitted works have taken place … in contravention of the Environmental Permitting (England and Wales) Regulations 2016.” read the letter, seen by the Guardian. It added: “The site is currently under investigation for permitting and waste offences.” .

The EA alleges dredging has been carried out and waste has been left on site within the flood plain, constituting a flood risk activity under the regulations that would have required an environmental permit. Carrying out the work without one is an offence, it states.

The agency said it was carrying out additional investigations to see if further relevant information came to light – including whether Powlesland and volunteers had committed other offences and the environmental impact of the offence.

Powlesland, who lives on a boat on the Roding, said he asked the EA to clean up the river several times over many years, but it had not acted.

“After decades of ignoring rampant environmental crime on the Roding, the Environment Agency has finally decided to act,” he said.

“But it’s not action against Thames Water for dumping billions of litres of sewage in the Roding, or the waste criminals who have dumped thousands of tonnes of rubbish on its banks, but against the River Roding Trust for … restoring a river without a permit.”

Organised criminals have been dumping waste illegally along the Roding, where it is falling into a tributary of the river. The EA has been investigating the dumping near Stapleford Tawney, south-east of Epping.

The nature writer Robert Macfarlane, who has visited the Roding, said on Instagram: “If the Environment Agency do prosecute I guarantee they will meet a tidal wave of objection, ridicule and more.”

Since the cleanup in February, Powlesland said: “The section of the river which was cleared is really coming back beautifully, wildlife is returning, yet we are being threatened with prosecution.

“This seems to get to the nub of the problem with the EA. They do not prosecute things that they should prosecute and all they are doing is going after easy targets.”

Powlesland said he would be happy to liaise with the agency and let it know what the charity was planning so the EA could point to any obvious issues such as water mains or rare habitats along the river. “We have asked them repeatedly to do this clearance work. This 10 days was part of our volunteer work over the last five years cleaning up the river, which is the EA’s job,” he said.

The River Roding is subject to significant raw sewage discharges, which the local MP Jas Athwal raised in the Commons this month.

According to data obtained by the Friends of the Roding, the Cran Brook sewage outflow discharges more than 750,000 litres of raw sewage per year into the Roding, information that has been passed to the agency.

In a statement the EA said: “We deeply care about protecting the River Roding and will work with any partners who want to help improve the local environment.

“However, governance and expert advice is necessary to make sure that work does not cause unintended harm – to flood risk, drainage or the wider environment.

“More broadly, we continue to respond to pollution incidents in the River Roding, including working with our partners to rectify pipe misconnections.”

Thames Water has been approached for comment.

À surveiller

Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes

  • The Environment Agency will face significant public backlash and ridicule if they prosecute.

    Très probable · En quelques jours

Questions ouvertes

  • Will the Environment Agency prosecute Paul Powlesland?
  • What are the specific penalties if he is found guilty?
  • Will the EA take action against illegal dumpers and Thames Water?

Sujets liés

This article was originally published by Guardian UK.

Articles liés

Plus sur ce sujetRiver Roding