Water-use Efficiency – Irrigation Lagoon
This is an old version of the page
Date published: 16 January, 2023
Date superseded: 14 February, 2024
For recent changes to this guidance, please see the bottom of the page.
Aim
The aim of this item is to improve water-use efficiency by collecting and storing water in an irrigation lagoon. This will also help to protect water quality at times of low water availability due to low river flows.
Eligibility
The land must be within a catchment which drains to water bodies that are significantly impacted because of abstraction for agriculture.
Spatial targeting
You can check if this option is available on your holding using the search targeting tool which can be found on any of the following AECS guidance pages:
Application requirements
You must produce a diffuse pollution steading assessment.
Requirement
- you must hold an abstraction licence from the Scottish Environment Protection Agency
- the lagoon must be off-line (i.e. there should be no impounding works which hold back flows in wetlands, rivers, lochs and estuaries)
- you must obtain planning permission, or have confirmation that planning permission is not required for your proposed lagoon
- where a proprietary lining is used, a receipt for the liner will be required
Payment
Irrigation lagoon
The maximum payment for this option is restricted to £30,000 per business:
- £2.24 per cubic metre without a proprietary liner
- £6.25 per cubic metre with a proprietary liner
Collection of run-off from farm steading roofs:
- underground drainage – £35.46 linear metre
Inspections
The inspectors will check:
- the location and extent of any irrigation lagoon
- that you have a receipt for a proprietary liner
- the length in metres of drainage to the lagoon
- the lagoon is offline and there are no impounding works which hold back flows in wetlands, rivers, lochs and estuaries
Additional guidance
Recent changes
Section | Change |
---|---|
Spatial targeting | Target map updated. |
Requirement | First bullet revised stating that you must hold an abstraction licence from the Scottish Environment Protection Agency. |
Previous versions
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