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The government has been accused of having ‘no plan’ to deal with drought conditions which have seen record wildfires.

Millions of people in southern England are subject to hosepipe bans, farmers are concerned about their crops, and natural habitats are under pressure as months of dry weather push the country towards dwindling water supplies with another heatwave on the horizon.

It is only set to get worse with the climate emergency expected to bring drier, hotter summers to the UK, and with that, the potential for more frequent droughts.

“This crisis in our system was entirely predictable and the government should have both anticipated and planned for it,” Jim McMahon, the shadow secretary of state for environment, food and rural affairs, told The Independent.

“In a country with plenty of rain outside of mid-summer, we should not need to rely on hosepipe bans to get us through the dry months.”

It comes as The Independent can exclusively reveal that more wildfires broke out in England and Wales in July than there were in the entirety of last year, as the dry and warm weather set conditions for fires to tear through the countryside and into cities.

There were 244 wildfires recorded in both countries in July, compared to just 11 in July last year – more than 22 times as many – and more than the 237 recorded in the entirety of 2021, according to the National Fire Chiefs Council’s wildfire lead Paul Hedle.

Faced with the hotter, drier summers, farmers are among those calling for decisive action from the government.

“I don’t think anybody is really prioritising the strategic importance of water,” Tom Bradshaw, the deputy president of the National Farmers’ Union, said of the government.

“That’s something that we need them to really value – the importance of water and underwriting our food security – far more than they do at the moment.”

The Cuckmere River in East Sussex. The region is subject to a hosepipe ban

(Getty )

Mr Bradshaw said earlier this week that the dry weather has caused the earliest start to harvest for many farmers since 1976, prompting fears about the impact on food production and crop planting.

He said while progress had been made, particularly with the government’s water infrastructure grant scheme that helps farmers build water storage capacity on farms, more needed to be done.

“As we have a more extreme climate, we’re going to need to be more flexible about our water abstraction,” he said – something which could concern environmental campaigners.

The independent Climate Change Committee (CCC) has previously warned that the government is not well-prepared for droughts.

Richard Millar, head of adaptation and climate science at the CCC, told The Independent that when it comes to agriculture “a lot more needs to be done”.

A dried up river bed of the River Thames near Somerford Keynes in Gloucestershire (Andrew Matthews/PA)

(PA Wire)

More can also be done to incentivise water companies to plug leaks in their infrastructure and promote efficient water use among members of the public, the body said. If adaptation doesn’t happen there’s a risk that demand for water could outstrip supply in certain parts of the country if global heating continues unabated.

The committee said the government needs to help build more resilience in agriculture by funding more research into the types of crops farmers can grow in hotter, drier conditions and by helping farmers make the right long-term decisions for their businesses when faced with more extreme weather.

Mr Millar said: “We still need to see more action from government through the regulator to the water companies and ultimately, to us as water consumers, homes and businesses to ensure that we will have confidence we can maintain resilience in our public water system.”

The Environment Agency’s National Framework for Water Resources said that England will need an extra 25 per cent of our current water supply by 2050, putting additional pressure on a system already in crisis.

Parched ground on the normally green Greenwich Park in London

(EPA)

The boom in wildfires, which destroyed 60 properties in London, Norfolk and Lincolnshire on 19 July, can devastate ecosystems for years, while critically low water levels are also having a growing impact on the natural world.

A recent report by The Wildlife Trusts found that by 2050 over half of the country’s nature reserves would see water levels in rivers falling by more than 30 per cent during dry conditions like the one’s parts of the country are experiencing this summer.

“We’re very worried about this,” said Kathryn Brown, the director of climate change and evidence at The Wildlife Trusts.

“Government doesn’t have a plan at all for dealing with the effects on the natural environment from these drought conditions,” she told The Independent.

“We haven’t really seen any progress. And because our rivers are in such poor condition already, it makes it doubly worrying that there isn’t a plan, there isn’t a climate change adaptation plan for the natural environment, including our freshwater habitats.”

Drought can see water levels in water bodies drop, or even dry up completely, destroying ecosystems that live off the water, said Ms Brown. It can also concentrate the already high levels of pollution in rivers, and higher temperatures can reduce oxygen levels, causing algal blooms.

While the Environment Agency does move fish from rivers where water levels have dropped too low, Ms Brown said there was not a lot of action taking place to protect wildlife in drought conditions.

The greens and fairways at Littlestone Golf Club near New Romney in Kent (Gareth Fuller/PA)

(PA Wire)

Ms Brown said she wanted to see the government introduce a proper plan to help nature adapt as the climate changes, put out better information on what the public can do to help wildlife in hot, dry weather, and greater efforts to tackle pollution in the country’s rivers.

Every river in England is currently polluted, according to government figures.

A Defra spokesperson told The Independent: “The government is taking robust action to prepare for the challenges of dry weather. This includes developing an ambitious third National Adaptation Programme which is our plan to make the UK a more climate resilient country.

“We are already taking action to build resilience now and into the future, with water companies investing £469 million to investigate strategic water resources options, like new reservoirs, water recycling and water transfers schemes, to improve resilience of England’s water supplies.

“All water companies have confirmed there are no threats to current essential supplies. The government is continuing to work closely with water companies and the Environment Agency to take the steps needed to protect public supplies, the environment and critical sectors that depend on water, including farmers.”

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