
Mobuoy: Calls for public inquiry over one of Europe's largest illegal dumps
BBC Radio Foyle's North West Today programme has been to the site at Campsie to meet environmental activist, Dean Blackwood. Mr Blackwood, a director at Faughan Anglers and principal planner for the Department of Environment up until 2013, said there was a "bubbling lake of toxic waste and no proper remediation work started"."Not only were big holes allowed to be dug up for this waste to be deposited, they were allowed to be dug outside any regulations," Mr Blackwood added.The dump consists of two parcels of land - the City Industrial Waste (CIW) site and the Campsie Sand and Gravel (CSG) site.It is thought to cover more than 100 acres of land or the size of about 70 football pitches."The failure of the authorities to act in a proper manner really calls into question the effectiveness of our government departments to regulate and protect the environment," Mr Blackwood said."This environmental crime has been described as unprecedented in the UK so you would have expected an unprecedented sentence," he added.He called for a public inquiry.
The Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) MLA Mark H Durkan said the men had "profited to the tune of over £40m by illegal dumping waste right beside our city's main drinking water supply". "It's clear they were only interested in their own profits and cared not one bit about the risk this posed to public health or the surrounding environment," he added.Durkan said the impact was being felt in the area "with the A6 road project being delayed as a result with a knock on effect on the North West's economy"."We are now looking at a bill of up to £700m to clean up this site at a time when the public purse is under significant pressure," he added.
He reiterated his party's call for a full public inquiry, adding that progress and investment was needed to make the site safe.The Northern Ireland Assembly passed a motion for a public inquiry into illegal waste disposal in March 2014.But in response to a question from the Green Party in 2020, the then Agriculture and Environment Minister Edwin Poots ruled one out.
Alderman Darren Guy, from the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) said the sentencing "is far from adequate"."Like other parties, we would support calls for a full inquiry as we believe that there were more people involved in this crime than the two men now sentenced.""We believe it is much more important to call for the government and the Daera minister to now find the correct solutions and the funding to begin the massive clean-up of the contaminated Mobuoy site."
The court was told on Friday that the amount of waste illegally disposed of could potentially have generated £30m for Doherty's company, Campsie Sand & Gravel Ltd.For Farmer's firm, City Industrial Waste Ltd, the potential sum was more than £13m.Prosecution lawyers said the case against Doherty and Farmer concerned about 636,000 tonnes of waste including construction and domestic waste.The court was told that no pollution has yet been detected in the river, but that ongoing monitoring will be required, at "significant" cost to the public purse.The £700m figure for the potential repair bill is contained in 2022/23 accounts from the Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (Daera) which were published in February 2024.They estimate a cost range of between £17m and £700m.Following sentencing on Friday, Agriculture Minister Andrew Muir described the Mobuoy dump scandal as a "sophisticated and deliberate environmental crime of unprecedented scale".He announced plans to launch a public consultation on a draft remediation strategy for the site.
Does the sentence meet the gravity of the crime?
In a statement to BBC Radio Foyle, NI Water said: "Water undertake sampling and analysis for drinking water quality monitoring with samples taken at the water treatment works, the Service Reservoirs and at customer taps."There have been no water quality breaches in the treated drinking water supplied from Carmoney water treatment works that have been related to the Mobuoy waste site."Financial journalist Paul Gosling told BBC News NI "it is also one of the most dire examples possible of regulatory failure by state bodies in Northern Ireland"."The outcome will be a massive financial burden for Northern Ireland that will be a blight on the capital and revenue budgets of government here for probably decades to come," he added."People will be now asking does the sentence meet the gravity of the crime. The consequences will arguably be more severe for our society than for the perpetrators of the crime."
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