Early Peat was extracted from the Moors during
Roman times, since the Levels were first drained. After the Romans left Britain, peat extraction was undertaken by hand by the owning or tenanted farmers.
Victorian era By the late
Victorian period, the
Eclipse Peat Company was the main commercial extractor of peat, operating initially across
Shapwick Heath. The tramway had its mainworks at the
Broomfield Works, where from the 1930s the company constructed its own locomotives from kits supplied by
R.A. Listers of
Dursley, based around either Lister diesel or
J.A.P. petrol engines. The railway crossed both the
Glastonbury Canal and the former
Somerset Central Railway from
Burnham-on-Sea to
Wells, near
Ashcott railway station. Merged into the
Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway, west of Ashcott existed "Alexander siding", which allowed exchange between the SD&JR and the Eclipse tramway system, and hence distribution of cut peat products across the United Kingdom. In 1949 a
British Railways passenger train from
Highbridge collided with an Eclipse narrow gauge diesel locomotive crossing on the level and left the track, ending up in the Glastonbury Canal. The tramway was worked for a final time in 1983, after which all transport was undertaken by road. One of the locomotives, Lister 42494, is currently preserved at
Twyford Waterworks. The introduction of plastic packaging in the 1950s allowed the peat to be packed without rotting, which led to the industrialisation of peat extraction during the 1960s to meet the demand for peat for
horticulture. However, the resultant reduction in water levels put local
ecosystems at risk; peat wastage in pasture fields was occurring at rates of 1–3 feet (0.3–0.8 m) per century. The need to reduce the amount of peat extracted led to mechanisation, and hence Eclipse agreed to be bought by
Fisons in 1961. This was the last year that hand-cutting was used to extract peat, and since that time all cutting has been done by machine. In 2012 the Fisons Eclipse Peat Works covered , but only were actually worked — less than 0.5% of the entire area of the Somerset Levels. Employing 90 people, more were employed in the summer when the peat was turned by hand to allow it to dry. 70% of production was sold in various products to domestic gardeners, while 30% was used for commercial purposes. The system led to the creation of a number of
Sites of Special Scientific Interest, giving a haven to wildlife on the levels. File:Peat Extraction - geograph.org.uk - 96101.jpg|Preparing areas in the Somerset Levels for peat extraction, 2005 File:Flooded Peat Workings, Cold Harbour, Somerset - geograph.org.uk - 81282.jpg|Old peat working, now allowed to flood, at Cold Harbour, 2005 File:Old peat workings - geograph.org.uk - 668715.jpg|Old peat extraction areas, now flooded and "returned to nature", 2008 In 2022,
Somerset Wildlife Trust issued a "position statement" on peat extraction in Somerset, calling for the practice to end immediately, and stating that "Given that the cost of peatland restoration will continue to increase until extraction ceases, it would be both illogical and an inefficient use of public funds for UK Governments to continue to invest in peatland restoration whilst permitting peat use and extraction to continue." In 2023, the local authority,
Somerset County Council, was discussing with the British Government a way to pay the peat extraction companies to cease extraction from the Somerset Levels. The council is run by the
Liberal Democrats, who have promised to bring extraction to a halt. Companies still extracting peat in 2023 include Godwins, who were at that time making their compost with around 30% peat, and stating that they intended to make their products entirely peat-free. The council has stated that all extraction licences are due to expire "by the end of 2042". File:Peat extraction areas near Glastonbury.jpg|Peat extraction areas near
Glastonbury File:Peat extraction in strip next to reedbed.jpg|Peat extraction in strip next to a
reed bed File:Peat production on Somerset Levels.jpg|Factory with bagged peat, extraction in the background File:Peat mountain on Somerset Levels.jpg|Pile of extracted peat with excavators == References ==