Water testing breakthrough for Scotland
New help is at hand for those working to promote the sustainability and quality of Scotland’s natural environment.
Watch the story as reported on STV's North Tonight.
EnPrint® Ltd is a brand new spin-out company from the SCRI Group, Scotland’s leading centre for research on plants and their interactions with the environment based in Invergowrie, Dundee.
EnPrint® applies DNA fingerprinting technology to deliver accurate assessment of water quality. This has become a challenging requirement following the EU Water Framework Directive (WFD).
The Directive aims to ensure that all environmental agencies monitor and improve water sources. The intention is that they achieve ‘good’ ecological status by 2015.
EnPrint® will be based at Invergowrie at the SCRI Group headquarters on the edge of Dundee. It brings another new, life sciences application to the thriving hub of innovative activity already establishing itself in an area which has seen the decline of traditional, manufacturing industry.
Scotland’s Environment Minister, Roseanna Cunningham, said: “This is another exciting example of the practical uses our scientists are applying their experience and expertise to.
“Water quality is of paramount importance, as it is essential for clean drinking water and supports the healthy environments and habitats for which Scotland is renowned the world over.
“With the onset of climate change it is increasingly important we are able to detect changes in our natural environment. Such information is essential if we are to make informed decisions to manage these valuable assets for both the health of the environment and the population.”
EnPrint® Chief Executive Officer, Dr Rayne Longhurst, said: “This is an exciting technology with a ready-made market opportunity presented by the WFD, which we are eager to start developing.
“The medical and forensic fields already benefit from DNA fingerprinting technology and EnPrint® is perfectly placed to exploit a first-mover advantage towards introducing a similar approach in the environmental sector.“
Molecular methods have become important in the assessment of natural populations in most, if not all, ecosystems. The soil ecology group, led by Dr Tim Daniell of the Environment Plant Interactions programme at of SCRI, has developed a range of molecular tools that the Institute has applied in aquatic systems with support from Scottish Enterprise, under the Proof of Concept funding programme and the local Tayside office.
Mylnefield Research Services Ltd, SCRI’s commercial wing, has been heavily involved in the venture. Start-up capital of £150,000 from the Genomia Seed Fund has also been secured, and was announced today.
Dr Keith Winton, the Managing Director of the Genomia Fund said: "Although Genomia has made investments in spin-outs from other research institutes in Scotland, this is its first in one at SCRI.
"The medical and forensic fields already benefit from DNA fingerprinting technology and EnPrint® is perfectly placed to exploit a first-mover advantage towards introducing a similar approach in the environmental sector." - Dr Rayne Longhurst, EnPrint® CEO
“We are pleased to be involved with what promises to be an important business opportunity with a market reach stretching far beyond Scottish shores. We look forward to significant success for the company vindicating our faith in the expertise of the team at SCRI."
The news has also been welcomed by Perth and Kinross Council. Enterprise and Infrastructure Committee Convener, Councillor John Kellas, congratulated the SCRI on its pioneering work.
“We are very lucky to have an organisation like SCRI here,” he said.
“It is a very important employer and carries out some very important work which puts our area on the map in terms of its groundbreaking research in this field. This is incredible technology and we are very proud that is has been developed in Perth and Kinross.”
SCRI’s Tim Daniell said: “The state-of-the-art EnPrint® tools replace the traditional methods that involve the use of microscopes. The process allows scores of samples to be analysed simultaneously, and the results can be presented in a format completely compatible with current methods of water testing. It means that EnPrint® technology can be easily integrated into the usual biological toolkit.”
His colleague, Dr David M Roberts, said: “The techniques we have developed will work alongside the existing tools to increase environmental agencies’ ability to spot trends or detect environmental changes.”
The key advantages EnPrint® brings are:
- high speed throughput
- reliability
- accuracy
- affordability
- sensitivity
- semi-automation.
Low standards of water quality may threaten the aquatic environment, drinking water quality and recreational water use. According to the Scottish Government* sewage, industry, urban development and agriculture are some of the factors that may affect water quality.
In 2006 734 km of Scotland’s rivers were still classed as ‘poor or seriously polluted’.
Notes to editors
* Low standards of river water quality may threaten the aquatic environment, drinking water quality and recreational water use. Sewage, industry, urban development and agriculture are some of the factors that may affect river water quality.
The Scottish Environment Protection Agency (SEPA) has established a Digitised River Network (DRN) to classify about 25,000 km of the approximately 100,000 km of rivers and burns in Scotland. The DRN comprises those watercourses draining a catchment of 10 km 2 or more. Rivers are classified as excellent, good, fair, poor or seriously polluted according to measures of chemical, biological, nutrient and aesthetic quality. Between 2000 and 2006 the length of 'unclassified' river fell by 84 per cent to 2076 km.
Between 1999 and 2006, the length of poor and seriously polluted rivers in Scotland fell by 37 per cent to 734 km. SEPA set a target of a reduction of 351 km in poor and seriously polluted rivers for the period 1999-2006 1. Poor biological and nutrient quality are the most frequent reasons for classifying rivers as poor or seriously polluted. Source: www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/Statistics/Browse/Environment/TrendRiverWater
SCRI is partly funded by the Rural and Environment Research and Analysis Directorate of the Scottish Government. It is one of five Main Research Providers that undertake research on the Scottish Government programmes of research in the areas of environment, agriculture and biology. See also: KnowledgeScotland
More information from:
Phil Taylor, Head of Communications, SCRI, Invergowrie, Dundee, DD2 5DA. Tel: 01382 560044 (direct line), Mobile: 07810 860 701 or
Lorraine Wakefield, Information and Online Service Officer, SCRI, Invergowrie, Dundee, DD2 5DA. Tel: 01382 560047 (direct line) or 562731 (switchboard).
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