Understanding the River Taff: What Our Research Revealed About Water Quality and River Governance

Understanding the River Taff: What Our Research Revealed About Water Quality and River Governance

A research project has been conducted on behalf of the Save our Taff campaign, and in this blog we details some of the findings.

As the Save Our Taff campaign continues to develop, one of our key priorities has been moving beyond raising awareness of water pollution and towards understanding exactly what challenges are affecting the River Taff. To support this transition, a research project was undertaken by Lauren Turner, as partial completion of her MSc in Environmental Management. It examined both the health of the river and the effectiveness of the legal frameworks responsible for protecting it.

The study, Assessing the Effectiveness of Legal Frameworks in Enhancing and Promoting Water Quality of Rivers Within an Urban Catchment Context: A Case Study of the River Taff in Cardiff City, combined scientific water quality monitoring with an assessment of the laws and regulations designed to protect the river. By bringing together environmental science and legal analysis, the project aimed to answer an important question: are the systems currently in place doing enough to protect and improve the water quality of the River Taff?

The study is set to be published as an academic research paper that can be linked directly to the ‘Save our Taff’ campaign. Below is an explorative summary of the research paper presented within an accessible format. 

A young woman at the March for Water event in London. She has a wave painted in blue on her cheek.

© Alex Griffiths

Why was the study needed?

The River Taff has undergone a remarkable recovery since the industrial pollution that once heavily impacted its waters. However, modern pressures continue to affect the river. Urban runoff, combined sewer overflows (CSOs), nutrient pollution, and emerging contaminants such as macro and microplastics remain ongoing concerns.

At the same time, public awareness of these issues remains relatively low. Findings from the Save Our Taff public perception survey highlighted that while many people value and use the River Taff, there is limited understanding of the pollution challenges it faces. This highlighted the need to first establish a clearer evidence base around the river’s condition before further awareness-raising and campaigning efforts could take place.

How was the research conducted?

The study adopted a mixed-method approach, combining legal analysis with scientific fieldwork.

From a legal perspective, the research examined key legislation governing water quality in Wales and the UK, including:

  • The Water Framework Directive and its retained UK equivalents.
  • The Environmental Permitting Regulations.
  • The Water Industry Act.
  • Environmental legislation relating to biodiversity and river management.

Alongside this, water quality monitoring was undertaken across fifteen locations along the urban stretch of the River Taff through Cardiff.

Several indicators of river health were assessed, including:

  • Dissolved oxygen
  • pH
  • Water temperature
  • Ammonia
  • Turbidity
  • Conductivity
  • Total dissolved solids

These indicators were chosen because they provide insight into the overall ecological condition of the river and can help identify the impacts of pollution sources commonly associated with urban environments. They also set the legal standard for the River Taff’s ecological and chemical status, under the Water Framework Directive. 

The monitoring programme focused particularly on locations near combined sewer overflows and outfall pipes to better understand how these features may influence water quality within the urban catchment.

Some plastic pollution seen along the banks of the river Taff

Michaela Morgan-Bullock

What did the research find?

The findings presented a mixed picture.

The research found that Wales and the UK possess a relatively comprehensive legal framework for protecting freshwater environments. Existing legislation provides clear environmental objectives, monitoring requirements, permitting systems, and duties for regulators and water companies.

However, the study also identified several weaknesses that limit the effectiveness of these legal frameworks in practice.

A gap between Legal Compliance and Ecological Health

One of the most significant findings was the existence of a gap between legal compliance and ecological sufficiency.

In simple terms, a river can technically meet some legal requirements while still experiencing environmental pressures that negatively affect wildlife and ecosystem health.

Scientific evidence reviewed during the study suggested that some legal thresholds may not always reflect the conditions needed to support sensitive aquatic species. This creates a situation where compliance with legislation does not necessarily guarantee optimal ecological outcomes.

Monitoring remains largely reactive

The research also identified limitations in current monitoring approaches.

Many monitoring programmes are designed to assess long-term compliance with regulatory standards rather than identify short-term pollution events. This can make it difficult to detect the impacts of:

  • Heavy rainfall events
  • Combined sewer overflow discharges
  • Urban runoff incidents
  • Temporary pollution spikes

As a result, episodic pollution events that may have significant ecological impacts can be underrepresented within existing datasets.

Two people stand by the riverside, holding water monitoring equipment and a clipboard

Data transparency and Accessibility

Another challenge identified was the accessibility and transparency of water quality data.

While substantial monitoring is undertaken by regulatory bodies, the study found that publicly available information often lacks the detailed numerical data needed to fully understand water quality trends and assess whether management interventions are achieving desired outcomes.

Urban pressures continue to affect the river

The scientific monitoring undertaken during the project highlighted that the River Taff continues to face pressures commonly associated with urban rivers.

While many parameters remained within acceptable standards, evidence suggested ongoing influences from:

  • Combined sewer overflows
  • Urban runoff
  • Nutrient loading
  • Wastewater infrastructure pressures

The research concluded that although significant improvements have been achieved over recent decades, continued management and monitoring are necessary to ensure these pressures do not undermine the river’s long-term ecological health.

A european eel swimming along the bed of a river

WildNet - Jack Perks

Key Recommendations

The study proposed several recommendations to strengthen both monitoring and governance of the River Taff.

These included:

More proactive monitoring

Rather than relying predominantly on periodic or reactive monitoring, future programmes should focus on identifying pollution hotspots and monitoring them more consistently.

This would allow pollution issues to be identified earlier and provide a better understanding of how water quality changes during different environmental conditions.

Improved integration of science and policy

Scientific monitoring data should play a greater role in informing regulatory decisions and enforcement actions.

The study highlighted the importance of ensuring that monitoring results are not simply collected but actively used to guide policy development and environmental management.

Stronger alignment between legal standards and ecological evidence

Environmental standards should continue to evolve alongside scientific understanding of freshwater ecosystems.

Where evidence indicates that current thresholds are insufficient to protect river health, policymakers should consider updating standards to better reflect ecological requirements.

Enhanced data transparency

Improving access to monitoring data would allow communities, researchers, campaign groups, and decision-makers to better understand water quality trends and contribute to river improvement efforts.

A picture of the crowds at the Restore Nature Now march, with a sign saying "end river pollution" in focus amongst the sea of other signs

Logan Walker

What happens next?

The findings from this research are already helping to shape the next phase of the Save Our Taff campaign.

The water quality monitoring programme taking place throughout 2026 has been designed to build upon the lessons learned from this study. While the 2025 monitoring provided an important baseline assessment of water quality along the urban stretch of the River Taff, the 2026 programme will focus more heavily on hotspot monitoring and proactive sampling strategies.

Once the 2026 monitoring programme is complete, the results will be analysed alongside the 2025 dataset to identify recurring trends, patterns, and potential pollution concerns. This will allow us to better understand the issues affecting the River Taff and determine where interventions may be needed. From there, the campaign will communicate the findings to the public, raise awareness of the issues identified, and advocate for action from the organisations and decision-makers responsible for protecting the river.

Protecting the River Taff requires more than identifying problems, it requires evidence, transparency, collaboration, and action. This research represents an important step towards achieving that goal and ensuring that future efforts to improve the river are guided by a strong foundation of scientific evidence.