Advertisement

Night Life of Dutch Cattle to Diminish

Share
Associated Press

Authorities have ordered an 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew from spring to fall for cattle in the pastures of this small Dutch farming community.

The new measure requires farmers to put their cattle in barns at night and keep their droppings outdoors from polluting the area’s drinking water.

The curfew, which takes effect Jan. 1, 1990, has farmers irate. For as long as anyone can remember they have left their cattle in the pastures at night during the warm months, saving the expense and time of moving them in and out of barns every day.

Advertisement

But environmentalists claim the cows’ nights out are causing a serious pollution threat to the water supplies of tens of thousands of people in the southeastern Netherlands.

“The measure is part of a package to curb the contamination of our drinking water supplies with nitrates,” said Henk van Loon, a spokesman for Noord-Brabant, the southern province that includes this town of 7,800 people, 70 miles southeast from Amsterdam.

Earlier this year, the provincial environmental agency established that in the Vierlingsbeek reservoirs, which supplies drinking water to 25,000 households in the area, the levels of nitrates, which are components of animal excrement, were three times as high as the 200 milligrams per gallon allowed under Dutch law.

The human body converts nitrates into nitrites, which can damage the adrenal glands, especially in infants.

“It was time to do something drastic,” Van Loon said.

Two-thirds of Dutch households get their drinking water from reservoirs such as those in Vierlingsbeek.

Vierlingsbeek’s farmers plan a campaign to protest the measure, which their spokesman, Wil Kuenen, claims will cost them “fortunes.”

Advertisement

He explained that herding the cattle to and from pastures every day--instead of letting them out and keeping them out from April to November--will mean higher labor costs for farmers.

“It will take hours to get the animals into the pastures and back,” Kuenen said.

Advertisement