A string of top comedians have backed a campaign to stop the “slow death” of England’s largest lake.
Steve Coogan, Joe Lycett, Lee Mack and Paul Whitehouse have allied with Save Windermere to protect the World Heritage Site.
Founder and Cumbrian zoologist Matt Staniek says the lake is under threat by the amount of sewage pumped into it.
In 2022, there were 246 full days of untreated sewage being discharged from storm overflows into the Windermere catchment, with United Utilities the biggest culprit.
Matt said: “If sewage is going into Windermere, imagine what’s happening to your local river.
Couple use bucket for loo over Xmas and New Year after raw sewage floods drains“The most significant thing we have just received from the water industry is an apology. It acknowledges their responsibility for the current situation.
“What we lack is a comprehensive, visionary plan that guarantees the long-term protection of the crown jewel of the Lake District.”
The quartet of comedians will be joining Matt at a Save Windermere event at Bowness-on-Windermere on Monday.
United Utilities said: “We know there is much more to be done.”
Matt, 26, set up the campaign after he broke his neck in a car accident and daily visits to Lake Windermere became part of his recovery process.
Forced to wear a neck brace for 10 weeks, the 26-year-old took up photography in 2019 as a means to stop himself “from going completely insane”.
Encountering otters, kingfishers and dippers he said he became obsessed with the variety of wildlife that could be spotted from the bank of England’s largest lake.
But three years on he says these species have now disappeared.
“In this period of time I noticed something very concerning, a very sudden decline in water quality and the amount of wildlife I was seeing,” he said.
His monitoring recently found that species of invertebrates downstream from sewage treatment works at Ambleside had declined by 44 per cent.
UK's most polluted beaches mapped - with over 60 raw sewage warnings in placeHe has raised £16,000 in crowdfunding so far, which he says will enable him to gather evidence for the Environment Agency “to actually do their job”.