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    Home » Toxic metals found in UK peatlands could pose health risk
    World

    Toxic metals found in UK peatlands could pose health risk

    saiphnewsBy saiphnewsJuly 6, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Louise Cullen

    BBC News NI agriculture and environment correspondent

    BBC Ellie is looking at the camera and is wearing protective glasses. She is sitting behind a lump of peat and holding a yellow tape measure beside it. She is wearing blue protective gloves and a white lab coat. She has blonde hair tied back. BBC

    PhD student Ellie Purdy “jumped” at the chance to work on the project

    “Cutting edge” research by a team at Queen’s University Belfast (QUB) has found toxic heavy metals stored in peatlands across the UK.

    They say wildfires – and the effects of climate change – could see decades’ worth of pollutants like lead, arsenic, mercury and cadmium, released into our water courses.

    The scientists say the findings make re-wetting and restoring peatlands even more vital, to protect environmental and human health.

    Peatlands are well-known carbon sinks, locking away greenhouse gases in their watery depths.

    They have also been absorbing the industrial pollution that humans have been generating for two centuries.

    The QUB team, led by Professor Graeme Swindles, has been examining cores from across the UK, Ireland and further afield, as part of a global study with many other organisations.

    Stored pollution has even been found in samples from the remote Northern Arctic.

    “It’s quite staggering to find such high levels in our peatlands that you think are these incredibly pristine places in many ways,” said Prof Swindles.

    “But no – they have been affected by our pollution.”

    Prof Swindles is standing on a peat bog. He is smiling at the camera and is wearing a brown cap. He has a brown waterproof coat on with HH branding on the right lapel. He is holding a walking pole.

    Professor Graeme Swindles has been leading the project

    PhD student Ellie Purdy “jumped” at the chance to work on the project.

    “It’s basically just about how what we’re doing is affecting the environment.

    “And even though these contaminants were once stored in these peatlands they’re now being released under climate warming,” she said.

    She said it is a cause of concern for the future.

    She has been looking specifically at cores from Ellesmere Island in the Canadian High Arctic. Finding heavy metal contamination in “an extremely remote area with little civilisation around”, it has been “eye-opening” for her.

    “It just shows how connected we are throughout the globe,” she said.

    Dr Fewster is standing on a peatland smiling at the camera. He has ginger hair and is wearing a navy waterproof Rab coat. In the background are some hills.

    Dr Richard Fewster has focused on the potential impact of the warming climate

    Peatlands cover around 12% of Northern Ireland. In good condition, they form new peat at a rate of just 1mm a year.

    But more than 80% of them are in a poor or degraded state, largely due to burning or being drained for peat extraction.

    Experiments in the QUB labs evaluate how a changing climate might affect them.

    Dr Richard Fewster has focused on the potential impact of three likely scenarios – a warming climate, wildfires and summer droughts.

    While all three affect how peat behaves, burning has potentially the greatest impact.

    A sample of peat on a measuring tape. It is brown and damp. It has been dug up from the ground.

    A core sample showing darkened peat at the surface where two centuries’ worth of pollution is stored

    He said: “We’re seeing that burning actually mobilises some of the metals within the peatland much more rapidly, in a sort of a ‘big pulse’ event early on in the experiment that we don’t see in cores that are left intact.”

    “So one of the really early findings that we have is that protecting our systems in a wet, stable, intact condition is really important for locking these peat metals, these pollutants, away in our peatlands and preventing them from being released,” Dr Fewster said.

    A long-awaited peatlands strategy from the Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs requires Executive approval.

    The draft Climate Action Plan says Northern Ireland “will have to dramatically increase its annual peatland restoration activity” to meet Climate Change Committee recommendations of restoring 10,000 hectares by 2027.

    Mr Devenney is looking at the camera. He has a plain expression on his face. He has brown hair and a brown beard and is wearing a branded Ulster Wildlife black fleece.

    James Devenney from Ulster Wildlife has been leading restoration work

    At Garry Bog near Ballymoney in County Antrim, more than 3,000 dams have been created to block drains and raise the water table back up.

    The peat here runs to a depth of at least nine metres, which means it has been forming for more than 9,000 years and sequestering carbon for all that time.

    James Devenney from Ulster Wildlife has been leading the restoration work at the site.

    He said peatlands are our most significant, most impactful, terrestrial carbon sinks.

    “So the fact that we have 12% cover in Northern Ireland of peatlands – deep peat in a lot of cases that’s greater than 50 centimetres – there’s a huge scope of work that can be done.

    “Northern Ireland has a big part to play in tackling climate change,” Mr Devenney added.

    Prof Swindles said the message from the work of his team in the lab at QUB could not be starker.

    “It’s really clear we need to ensure these peatlands are kept wet. We need to restore them, rehabilitate them, block drains.

    “And we need to stop burning peatlands,” he said.

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