Changeflow GovPing Environment SEPA: Fish Barrier Removal Restores River Habitat
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SEPA: Fish Barrier Removal Restores River Habitat

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Published March 12th, 2026
Detected March 26th, 2026
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Summary

The Scottish Environment Protection Agency (SEPA) has completed the removal of a redundant weir on the Halter Burn, restoring 1.6km of upstream river habitat. This project, funded by SEPA's Water Environment Fund, aims to boost populations of endangered fish species and enhance river resilience.

What changed

The Scottish Environment Protection Agency (SEPA) has announced the completion of a project to remove a decades-old weir on the Halter Burn. This action restores access for migratory fish, including endangered Atlantic salmon and eels, to at least 1.6km of upstream river habitat. The project was commissioned by SEPA's Water Environment Fund and completed in February 2026, aligning with Scotland's River Basin Management Plan and the Scottish Wild Salmon Strategy.

While this is a news announcement and not a regulatory mandate for external entities, it highlights SEPA's ongoing efforts in river restoration. The removal is presented as an ecologically sound solution with lower carbon emissions and no ongoing maintenance requirements. As part of the project, over 300 trees were planted to enhance biodiversity and offset carbon emissions. Compliance officers in sectors involved with water management or environmental impact assessments may note this as an example of regulatory priorities and successful environmental remediation efforts.

Source document (simplified)

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Decades old fish barrier removal will breathe new life back into habitat

Date published: 12 March 2026

Partnership working Work has completed on the removal of a redundant weir restoring access for migratory fish to at least 1.6km of upstream river in the Borders.

The project was directly commissioned by the Scottish Environment Protection Agency’s (SEPA) Water Environment Fund and completed in February 2026.

The project on the Halter Burn at Yetholm Mains farm near Kelso was designed to help boost populations of fish such as the endangered Atlantic salmon, critically endangered eel, along with sea trout and lamprey. Removing the old weir also offers resilience to climate change by allowing the river to naturally adapt to changing flows and gives fish populations more of a chance of survival.

Historically, the weir was understood to have fed water to a mill building and latterly farm buildings to supply stock, but it has since lay disused for decades, preventing fish accessing good quality habitat upstream.

Enabling fish passage at this weir was an objective of Scotland’s River Basin Management Plan (RBMP 2021-2027). By removing the weir, it will continue to help improve the overall condition of the river as well as supporting the Scottish Wild Salmon Strategy.

Complete weir removal was chosen as the most ecologically sound option, meaning lower carbon emissions and a permanent remedy for fish migration, that does not require ongoing maintenance. Great care was also taken to manage the risk of pollution to the water environment during the removal.

As part of the project completion, over 300 trees were planted in the Halter Burn catchment providing enhanced biodiversity and shading for fish, as well as offsetting the groundworks emissions of CO2.

SEPA’s Project Officer Francis Hayes said:

“It’s hugely satisfying to see the removal of fish barriers which for decades have not only prevented fish from accessing thriving habitat but can also block other river wildlife too.

“To see what migratory species will benefit from their newly acquired habitat upstream is exciting as well as the restoration of natural river processes that have been long neglected.

“It seems only right that less than a stone’s throw away from this project long distance travellers conclude their Pennine Way adventure, much like the fish we are helping to return home after their own lengthy journeys spent at sea.”

SEPA administers the Water Environment Fund on behalf of Scottish Government and works in partnership with local authorities, land and structure owners, fishery trusts and conservation bodies to deliver an annual programme of river restoration projects.

While the condition of rivers and lochs in Scotland is generally classified as good by SEPA, many environmental challenges remain. One challenge is historical and physical alterations to rivers in Scotland.

The Water Environment Fund delivers projects which will derive the greatest benefit to Scotland’s rivers and neighbouring communities.

Notes to editors

Notes to editors

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
SEPA
Published
March 12th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Environmental groups
Industry sector
2213 Water & Wastewater
Activity scope
Habitat Restoration Water Management
Geographic scope
United Kingdom GB

Taxonomy

Primary area
Environmental Protection
Operational domain
Environmental Compliance
Topics
Water Quality Habitat Restoration Endangered Species

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