The restoration of the east marsh

East marsh after plastic debris removal, March 2021

The east marsh is one of two protected bird refuges at the Welsh Harp. Like the north marsh, it was extensively re-profiled in the late 1980s with public money to create a variety of marshland habitats for breeding wetland birds and wintering wildfowl notified under the reservoir's status as a SSSI.

With the funding needed for upkeep dwindling over the decades, the marshes were in a poor state at the start of 2021. Wheelie bins, rusting supermarket trollies, traffic cones, toys, tyres, off-cut timber and fly-tipped waste peppered the shallow wetlands.

Below the surface, a carpet of smaller plastics - bags, fabrics, wet wipes - and shredded micro-plastics lay on thick reefs of silt. Pools, islands, scrapes, channels and reed beds were clogged with sediment and litter, and invaded by fast-growing self-seeded willow.

Many breeding rafts on the east marsh were broken, unprotected and beached on the sediment deposits.

Following our sustained campaign for change, Natural England woke up to the crisis, and Canal and River Trust finally removed large items of debris from the marshes in early March 2021.

In November 2021, Canal and River Trust - following successful funding bids and consultation with campaigners - announced a new initial £85k winter works programme for the east marsh. The works include a hydrographic survey as a precursor to selective dredging, removal of self-seeded willow to improve reed habitats and fringes, and further marshland plastic and debris clearance by boat.

The silt (technically, alluvium) is contaminated with runoff and wastewater. It has been unmanaged for decades, and is slowly filling the reservoir. It is understood at some stage a major engineering project will be required to reduce it if the reservoir is to be saved. In the short term, the clogged habitats in the shallow marshes are now set to be reshaped.

More funds will support the phased replacement of the breeding rafts with floating reed beds. Due to start in the autumn of 2022, this will be first major breeding raft installation for thirty years.

In total, £165k has so far been pledged for restoration of the east marsh.

We applaud the response of the Canal and River Trust. We hope this is just the start.

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Sewage, trash and the Environment Agency

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Silk Stream bridge - a step too far