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Fish Legal’s lawyers have written to the Director General for the Environment in Brussels to request that the European Commission considers infraction proceedings against the UK government in Northern Ireland for breaches of environmental legislation under plans to reopen the River Lagan for canal navigation which would have a devastating effect on recovering salmon and trout populations.
 The Lagan  Canal Restoration Trust – set up to oversee the ‘restoration’ of the Lagan  corridor – counts among its partners both the Government Department for  Culture, Arts and Leisure (DCAL) and the Northern Ireland Environment Agency  (NIEA).
The Lagan  Canal Restoration Trust – set up to oversee the ‘restoration’ of the Lagan  corridor – counts among its partners both the Government Department for  Culture, Arts and Leisure (DCAL) and the Northern Ireland Environment Agency  (NIEA).
  
The Trust  intends to introduce a series of weirs and locks, straighten banks and dredge  the river bed to enable tourists to travel the from Lough Neagh to Belfast, all  of which would impede the passage of wild salmon returning to spawn in the  upper sections of the river and could ultimately lead to their extinction on  this particular river.
Whilst the work is being carried out in a piecemeal fashion, each development  is regarded by Fish Legal as a step in a much larger planned project, and  should require an environmental impact assessment (EIA) because of the  cumulative impact on the river.
In July, Fish  Legal – an environmental NGO set up to protect fisheries in the UK - informed  the Government Minister for Culture, Arts and Leisure (DCAL) that they faced  legal action should the Northern Ireland Executive decide to proceed with the  development without the benefit of a full EIA into the effect such work would  have on the wild salmon, as well as other migratory fish in the Lagan system.  Salmon angling is very important to Northern Ireland for tourism and for the  many angling clubs that fish the river.
Fish Legal  has now made an official complaint to the European Commission.
Justin Neal,  solicitor at Fish Legal, said:
“Whilst the Government may feel the Lagan is under-exploited by daytrippers and  holiday makers, it is a habitat for wild salmon – one of the most precious  and threatened species found in UK rivers. At a time in history when wild  salmon numbers are at their lowest levels we feel that the plans to recreate a  navigable waterway in a series of small projects is not only unlawful – but  also a sly move by the authorities to avoid the need to fulfil their  obligations under EU law. The Trust agreement also goes to the heart of the  contradiction inherent in DCAL’s responsibilities in Northern Ireland which on  the one hand include protection of inland fisheries and on the other promoting  such projects. We wait to see what the European Commission thinks.”
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