Gloucestershire Echo

MP gets water firm’s commitment to clean up the River Chelt

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ALEX Chalk has secured a major commitment from Severn Trent to clean up the River Chelt.

It follows the Cheltenham MP having been involved in weeks of behind-thescenes negotiatio­ns with the company.

Severn Trent, which manages the Cheltenham sewage network, has given Mr Chalk a “cast-iron commitment” to take measures which will reduce the use of emergency storm overflows at a site at Dowdeswell by 85 per cent by 2024.

Engineers are currently examining the most suitable measures to meet this commitment, and have agreed to update Mr Chalk in the coming weeks.

The commitment follows him successful­ly tracking down the overflow at Dowdeswell, which is near the town and alongside the A40, using Rivers Trust maps.

He contacted the landowner and located the outlet pipe, which lies between Charlton Kings and Dunkertons Cider, close to the reservoir.

Mr Chalk said: “I am absolutely delighted by this commitment from Severn Trent. Sewage in rivers should have been consigned to history long ago. It is not acceptable to me or my constituen­ts. These steps will restore biodiversi­ty to this key waterway.”

A spokespers­on for Severn Trent said: “We have had detailed discussion­s with Alex Chalk over recent weeks, and he has made his concerns very clear.

“Although the River Chelt has been getting cleaner over recent years, we now accept we need to go further and faster.

“So we are pleased to announce a cast-iron commitment to reduce overflows into the River Chelt by 85 per cent by the end of 2024.

“The detailed solution is being worked up, but we will do whatever it takes.”

According to Environmen­t Agency data, the River Chelt is cleaner than it was in 2015.

Biological quality elements (fish, invertebra­tes, macrophyte­s and phytobenth­os combined) are rated as ‘good’. Dissolved oxygen elements are rated as ‘high’.

Storm overflows are not unique to the UK, but are used in countries including Germany and Denmark to avoid toilets backing up in times of heavy rain.

They have been a feature of the River Chelt for many decades.

Under this new guarantee, overflows will be reduced from 139 per year to fewer than 20.

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