- About us
- Campaigns
- Get involved
-
News
Archived news
Quarry tax outcome
Wind farm for north coast
North Down Dump on Scotland
Written warning over pollution laws
Northern Ireland in the dock
Strangford Lough saved?
GM maize approved
Legal wranglings over illegal waste
Europe issues legal warning
Strangford trawling ban extended
Water Service pollutes salmon river
See you in court!
Environmental governance inquiry gets underway
Environment review moving fast
EPA denied
Belfast says No to incinerator
Belfast makes waves for climate justice
Planning and the climate challenge
An evening well spent with Michael Meacher
Green housing plan launched
Tell world leaders to turn down the heat
Mexican stand-off
NI Water must not be immune from the law.
People Power for Positive Planning
Friends of the Earth launches its first plastic bag
Assembly end of term report - must do better
Activism Gathering 2011
What do you think of the planning system?
Green No Deal?
A vision for the Programme for Government
Come to a screening of 'Gasland'
Plan it!
- Resource
Archived press release
Go to our press releases area for our current press releases.
Filthy factories, dodgy dumps and squalid sewage: new guide published
22 March 2005
Owners of polluting factories and landfill sites across Northern Ireland were put on notice this week as Friends of the Earth published a new guide to fighting pollution. The briefing which is free of charge gives individuals and communities the information they need to tackle pollution in their area.
Commenting as it was published, the guide's author, Friends of the Earth Campaigner Lisa Fagan, explained that Northern Ireland did not deserve its clean, green reputation:
"Recent media reports have exploded the myth that Northern Ireland is a green and pleasant land. Raw sewage is pumped into the sea at Portrush, Larne, Bangor and Donaghadee, and the countryside is littered with illegal dumps. Northern Ireland's failure to comply with European environmental law prompted Friends of the Earth to make six separate complaints to the European Commission[1]. Our new guide enables people living in the shadow of this pollution to get involved in the campaign".
Ms Fagan continued:
"Whether your problem is a dodgy dump, a filthy factory, or a squalid sewage outfall, this guide will help get you started. Obtaining official information, getting effluent samples tested, writing a press release, holding a public meeting and lobbying your elected representative - the guide covers all the essentials of pollution campaigning in an easy step-by-step format."
The guide is available free of charge from Friends of the Earth. Telephone 028 9023 3488 or email for your copy, alternatively you can download it from here.
Notes
[1] (back) Friends of the Earth has made six complaints to the European Commission in recent months concerning Northern Ireland's failure to comply with European environmental law. The complaints are as follows:
Urban Waste Water
Treatment Directive: failure to treat sewage properly before
discharging to water.
Treaty of
Rome: failure to lift Crown Immunity in order that Water Service
pollution may be properly regulated.
Landfill Directive:
failure to ensure that landfill sites which are closing are subject
to tough monitoring/management for as long as they pose a threat to
health and the environment.
Waste
Framework Directive: two complaints concerning illegal landfill
sites and cross-border dumping of waste.
Habitats
Directive: failure to protect the horse mussels of Strangford
Lough from decline caused by trawling and dredging.
To view PDF files you will need to download Adobe Acrobat Reader. Visually impaired users can get extra help with these documents from access.adobe.com.
Friends of the Earth Northern Ireland
7 Donegall Street Place
BELFAST
BT1 2FN
Tel: 028 9023 3488
Fax: 028 9024 7556
Email: foe-ni@foe.co.uk.
Published by Friends of the Earth Trust
Last modified: Oct 2008


