Lough Neagh is one of Northern Ireland’s most precious wildlife sites. The Lough also supplies water to 40% of Northern Ireland. It's supposed to be protected under international, European, and Northern Ireland law. Yet it's facing disaster.
Toxic blooms of blue-green algae, which are a result of fertilizer run-off from farming, have made the water a major health hazard. Water quality is poor, and birds and fish are disappearing.
This pollution can’t be ignored.
What’s at risk?
Rising up to protect Lough Neagh

Lough Neagh is dying, so we held a wake
Hundreds of local people and over 20 campaign groups gathered on the shores and held a wake for Lough Neagh in September 2023. The stinking green water is a very upsetting and embarrassing environmental disaster.

Local communities making their voices heard
People from all over Northern Ireland are rising up to protect this precious habitat. In October 2023, hundreds of people marched through Belfast to demand urgent action to end the environmental crisis at Lough Neagh. People will keep pushing for solutions that'll help breathe life back into the Lough.

Imagining a settlement
In December 2023, we held an event that brought people together to discuss the crisis at Lough Neagh and think about what a just settlement for the Lough might look like. The ideas shared through participation in this event will help with the creation of a Lough Neagh Recovery Plan.
Declaring a crime scene
Lough Neagh is dying and so we staged a stunt and declared the Northern Ireland Environment Agency (NIEA) offices a crime scene.
NIEA which is part of the Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (DAERA) has systematically failed to regulate pollution and protect wildlife and local communities. We believe that DAERA have failed to comply with the Water Framework Directive, Habitats Directive, Wildlife and Natural Environment Act and many other environmental laws.
We have the crime scene, but no police to hold the criminals to account.

Fighting sand dredging in court
It’s not just the pollution destroying Lough Neagh.
We welcomed the Northern Ireland Court of Appeal decision in 2017 that said the Northern Ireland government acted unlawfully by not stopping the dredging at Lough Neagh. Although we've already tasted success, we've had to take new action against the Department for Infrastructure.
Up to 2 million tons of sand is suction dredged from the bed of the Lough every year. This is the biggest unauthorised development in the history of Northern Ireland. There’s no question that the extraction is unlawful.

Lough Neagh should be the jewel in the crown of Northern Ireland. It should be a place of pride, thriving commerce and abundance
For over 3 decades I have grown to love Lough Neagh. I want to see it restored to an abundant, thriving ecosystem.
James Orr
We should be celebrating its mythology, history and its unique sense of place. It should be our Lake Geneva.
If we can’t save such a designated protected site, then nowhere is safe. Help us protect Lough Neagh
Donate now