Unsightly, polluting, plastic matting in the Peak District ordered to be removed

Mynediad & Chadwraeth
29 Mai
3 min read

After lobbying from BMC Peak Area Access Reps and others, DEFRA has ruled that the landowner must now comply with an existing enforcement notice requiring them to remove a plastic matting track on Midhope Moor.

Back in 2015, plastic matting was laid down by the landowner over almost a kilometre of Midhope Moor in the Peak District. This is an area of high, steep moorland designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) and a protected habitat for breeding birds including golden plovers, merlins, short-eared owls and curlews. This matting also crossed over Cut Gate bridleway, much-valued by hill walkers, ostensibly to facilitate moving heavy machinery for moorland restoration work, but in practice, used ever since to allow grouse-moor management vehicles to access the hill top.

BMC Access & Conservation Officer (England) Jon says, "Plastic matting may work for a while but it inevitably deteriorates and becomes unsightly, plastic pollution in the environment. If the landowner requires vehicles to climb this steep hill they need to carry out work on the track using appropriate materials, or encourage the grouse-shooters to walk up the hill themselves."

The plastic matting is deteriorating, causing pollution in this fragile, upland environment, home to rare birds and other wildlife. All photos: Peter Judd

Peak District Access Rep (for Kinder, Bleaklow and Alport), Peter Judd, reports, "Myself and BMC Peak District Area Access Co-ordinator, Henry Folkard, having always believed such an unnatural track has no place on such a sensitive moor, intervened at the Planning Inspectorate's hearing last summer, as we had done some years ago when the landowner sought, but was refused, retrospective planning permission. This hearing was in regard to the landowner's most recent attempt to thwart the planning enforcement notice served on them by the Peak District National Park Authority (PDNPA) in 2018, requiring them to remove the plastic matting.

"With Jon's approval we (BMC Peak Area) wrote in the BMC's name to the Planning Inspectorate last summer to ask to be able to make a submission on this and were granted our opportunity to put our case in support of Natural England's consent for the plastic matting to be removed at the public hearing last July.

"Today I received an email from DEFRA setting out the outcome of the landowner's appeal and I'm delighted to say the matting must be removed! So that is a very pleasing outcome, and it does seem possible that the combination of our submission and that of the much more substantial ones made by the RSPB and another individual in support of Natural England's position may well have helped DEFRA come to this decision. Now the landowner's appeal has been ruled invalid, we hope that the PDNPA will push their enforcement notice so that the track will finally be removed in the near future."

Jon Fullwood says, "Peter and Henry's tenacity and hard work on this is very much appreciated by the BMC and, I’m sure, the rest of the Peak Area."

The matting allows vehicular access for grouse-shooting and DEFRA has ruled that it should be removed on environmental grounds.

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