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Economic Development

Natural Resources Wales quizzed on job cut plans and budget deficit

A cross-party Senedd committee has questions NRW officials

Natural Resources Wales.(Image: Natural Resources Wales)

Senedd members have quizzed Natural Resources Wales (NRW) officials amid concerns about plans to cut 265 jobs to plug a £13m budget gap while water pollution in Wales worsens. Llŷr Gruffydd, who chairs the climate change committee, pressed NRW officials about immediate action to address a decline in Welsh Water’s environmental performance.

Sian Williams, head of operations at NRW, accepted that Welsh Water’s performance has worsened this year following a decline in the year before too. Ms Williams told the Senedd committee: “It’s something that concerns us as the regulators and it’s something that we’re calling on Welsh Water to respond to swiftly.”

She was alarmed by increases in pollution incidents and the number of significant incidents that have the biggest impact on nature as well as a decline in compliance with permits.

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Delyth Jewell, Plaid Cymru’s shadow climate change secretary, asked for details of potential prosecutions of any water companies for pollution or permit non-compliance.

Nadia De Longhi, NRW’s head of regulation and permitting, would not go into specific detail of prosecution cases that are still being developed.

But she pointed to 483 enforcement cases since 2018, with about 400 resolved – mostly through warning letters or formal cautions – three prosecutions and 46 cases outstanding.