Boston Target

Water firm has its work cut out on local rivers as population expands

ANGLIAN WATER PLEDGES £66M TO TACKLE STORM OVERFLOWS WITH SEWAGE SPILLS DOUBLING OVER THE LAST 12 MONTHS

- By ELLIS KARRAN Local Democracy Reporter

ANGLIAN Water has pledged to spend £66 million to tackle storm overflows in Lincolnshi­re, after sewage spills into local rivers almost doubled in the last 12 months.

There were 459,852 sewage spills in England’s waterways last year, which is around double last year’s total, according to figures from the Environmen­t Agency.

The numbers make for grim reading in Lincolnshi­re also, with Anglian Water being responsibl­e for 31,623 spills in 2023, a 97 per cent increase on the 2022 figure.

Anglian Water will be looking to plough £66 million into tackling storm spills in Lincolnshi­re from now to 2030, with a taskforce being set up across the East of England.

Other improvemen­ts will be focused on hotspot locations, as well as increasing storm water storage at water recycling centres.

The investment for Lincolnshi­re includes some £5.6 million for more monitors across the sewer network, almost £1 million for new screens and £37 million to increase treatment capacity to cater for population growth in specific Lincolnshi­re areas, such as Sleaford, Metheringh­am and Brant Broughton.

The most prominent areas for sewage dumps in the vicinity of Lincoln were Fulbeck, Nettleham, and the aforementi­oned Brant Broughton and Metheringh­am, with over 100 spills reported in each location.

An Anglian Water spokespers­on said the company was disappoint­ed by the figures, citing “more extreme weather events” as a cause for the increase, with 70 per cent of the spills taking place in the last three months of 2023.

But the Environmen­t Agency (EA) said that despite 2023 being the 6th wettest year since records began, this does not excuse the figures.

“It is important to note that heavy rainfall does not affect water companies’ responsibi­lity to manage storm overflows in line with legal requiremen­ts,” a spokespers­on said.

Another mitigating factor is the increase in event duration monitors at storm overflows in recent years. In 2010, just 7 per cent of overflow sites had these fitted, now 100 per cent of them do, making England a world leader in storm overflow monitoring.

In February, the Environmen­t Agency announced a fourfold increase in investigat­ions into water companies, as part of a “tougher regime” that has been fully funded by government and water company permits.

The organisati­on is also currently undertakin­g the largest ever criminal investigat­ion into “potential widespread non-compliance by water and sewerage companies at thousands of sewage treatment works.”

Since 2015, over £150 million in fines have been secured from 59 prosecutio­ns against water and sewerage companies by the Environmen­t Agency.

This clampdown is focused on driving improved standards across the sector, with Anglian Water receiving a two-star inspection from the Environmen­t Agency in consecutiv­e years.

Last year, Anglian Water was ordered to pay back £22 million in the form of reduced customer bills as a result of poor performanc­e, as water regulator Ofwat listed the provider as a “lagging company.”

Reacting to the Environmen­t Agency’s figures, a spokespers­on for Ofwat said the data was “very disappoint­ing” and provided “further evidence” that performanc­e on the environmen­t is “simply not good enough.”

“We are acutely aware of the damage this does to our natural resources and to public trust. Where companies fall short, we act.”

But will this go far enough? City of Lincoln Councillor Clare Smalley (Liberal Democrat) has called for reform of the system, to the tune of a “tougher” regulator than Ofwat.

The Lincoln Liberal Democrat group has also called for a blanket ban on water board bosses receiving bonuses when their company has been found to dump sewage in rivers and seas.

Cllr Smalley said it is a “complete scandal” and called on tougher action from regulators and central government.

“Our community should not be forced to put up with this any longer, yet time and again this Conservati­ve government has voted against tougher action on sewage dumping. “We need to see a ban on bonuses for water company bosses whose firms have pumped sewage into our waterways, and we need to see our local communitie­s protected from this .

“It’s disappoint­ing but not surprising that Lincoln’s Conservati­ve MP voted with the government to let water companies off the hook and fail to get to grips with this national shame.”

This is in reference to Karl McCartney (Conservati­ve) and a host of other Greater Lincolnshi­re Conservati­ve MPs, including Dr Caroline Johnson (Sleaford & North Hykeham), Lia Nici (Great Grimsby), Martin Vickers (Cleethorpe­s) and Victoria Atkins (Louth & Horncastle), voting down Amendment 45 of the Environmen­t Act in late 2021.

The amendment would have required water companies to “take all reasonable steps” to avoid using sewage overflows, and when Conservati­ve MPs voted against it, a series of mock blue plaques emerged in their constituen­cies criticisin­g their decision.

Karl McCartney slammed the plaques as being “deliberate misinforma­tion” and said the overall Environmen­t Act would take sufficient steps to protect waterways.

Hamish Falconer, the Labour Lincoln MP candidate, also said: “The environmen­t agency’s figures are appalling. The government has weakened regulation allowing water companies to get massively in debt while the sewerage system crumbled and illegal sewage dumping hit record levels.

“Labour will give the water regulator powers to block the payment of any bonuses until water bosses clean up their filth. We don’t need Tory dither and delay, we need immediate action. Under Labour, water bosses who oversee repeated illegal sewage dumping will face criminal charges.”

Over two years on from the introducti­on of the Environmen­t Act, and sewage dumps continue to soar across the country. As a result, the question still remains, is there a solution to all of this?

Our community should not be forced to put up with this any longer.

City of Lincoln Councillor Clare Smalley

 ?? ?? As more houses are built in the area, households increase dependency on a good sewerage system. Inset, recorded sewage spills in Lincolnshi­re
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES
As more houses are built in the area, households increase dependency on a good sewerage system. Inset, recorded sewage spills in Lincolnshi­re PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES
 ?? ?? Cllr Clare Smalley
Cllr Clare Smalley
 ?? ?? PHOTO: Environmen­t Agency
PHOTO: Environmen­t Agency
 ?? ?? New housing developmen­ts put more pressure on the system
New housing developmen­ts put more pressure on the system

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