Farmer fined £9,500 for allowing 'serious pollutant' to enter river

River pollution has cost a Devon farmer £9,500 (Stock photo)
River pollution has cost a Devon farmer £9,500 (Stock photo)

A farmer has been ordered to pay £9,500 in fines and costs for allowing a 'serious pollutant' to enter a tributary of the River Exe in Devon.

The case was brought forward by the Environment Agency following reports of pollution.

On 16 July 2015, Environment Agency officers visited Cleave Farm, Templeton near Tiverton, and found a tributary heavily contaminated with sewage fungus for 100 metres before it entered a larger stream that was also contaminated with sewage fungus.

The pollution was traced to a silage clamp at Cleave Farm. The farmer, Winston Reed, told officers the silage effluent should have been directed to a slurry store, but was leaking into a watercourse from a surface water ditch.

Officers were told a drain in the farm yard had been blocked off, but cracked concrete around the drain had allowed effluent to escape into the surface water system.

Serious pollutant

Silage effluent is an acidic liquid produced by the silage making process which is a "serious pollutant" if it enters a watercourse, according to the Environment Agency.

Exeter Crown Court heard that Winston Reed either by himself or his company, Reed Farms Ltd, which is currently in administration, is a persistent polluter.

In 2006 Winston Reed was cautioned for allowing slurry to enter a stream. Then Reed Farms Ltd caused significant pollution incidents in 2009, 2010, 2011 and 2012, which resulted in the company being either prosecuted or cautioned.

Since 2012, Officers had tried to work with Mr Reed to bring about changes at the farm to improve infrastructure, including visits from the Catchment Sensitive Farming programme.

Mischka Hewins of the Environment Agency said: "We always prefer to work in partnership with farmers to achieve compliance through advice and guidance. It’s disappointing when this fails and our only option to change behaviour and prevent pollution is to prosecute."