You can (and should!) read Martin’s full blog HERE an extract is reproduced below with his kind permission.

Chalkstreams are internationally significant habitats which are wilting under extreme pressure from diffuse pollution, abstraction and habitat damage. Many came close to an environmental disaster during last year’s drought and were only saved by exceptional rainfall during the summer of 2012.

Our stewardship of these precious world class environmental assets has been nothing short of shocking with over one third of our rivers are at risk of significant damage from over-abstraction. As my old mate and fishing MP Charles Walker said on Monday, “We are only too ready to lecture Brazil on how they should take better care of their unique rainforests but own record of protecting the majority of the planet’s chalkstreams is nothing short of shameful.”

This now becoming a legal issue for if the UK does not address unsustainable abstraction we will be at risk of failing to meet our legal obligations laid down in the EU Habitats Directive and the Water Framework Directive.

The summit was chaired by George Hollingbery MP the Chairman of the All Party Parliamentary Angling Group, and addressed by leading conservationist Tony Juniper and Lords Environment Minister Rupert de Mauley, who stood in for Richard Benyon who was called away to a funeral at the last moment.

The day began with the showing of two films on the plight of chalkstreams made by award-winning film maker Hugh Miles and concluded with a panel discussion with top officials from Defra and the Environment Agency along with representatives of the Angling Trust and the Salmon & Trout Association (S&TA).

Participants at the summit included broadcaster and writer Charles Rangeley-Wilson, top flyfisher Charles Jardine, local river trust and wildlife groups, a number of MPs and many well known river keepers and fishery owners on the Test, Itchen, Kennet, Avon and other chalkstreams.

Other speakers at the summit, included yours truly and Paul Knight, boss of the S&TA. We all called for radical reform of water resources and land use policy to enable all rivers to return to good ecological status free from damaging environmental impacts. It was agreed that a special Chalkstream Charter would be drawn up as a matter of urgency and presented to Environment Minister Richard Benyon early in the New Year.

The plain simple fact is that we have mismanaged water in this country for far too long. We fail to store this vital resource at times of plenty and then pump out the chalk aquifers during the all too frequent periods of drought. Check out these numbers from my area in the Thames Valley where the Kennet ran dry this winter.

Yes we need the government to make good its promise to reform abstraction licensing but more importantly we have manage our water for the benefit of the environment. That means cutting demand through compulsory metering and setting a realistic price which will allow for greater investment in infrastructure including new reservoirs and other storage facilities to collect run off as opposed to draining down the aquifers. Discharge consents for phosphates and other nasties need raising and unacceptable farming practices must end.