The Mail on Sunday

Water warning led Gove to back PM

- By Harry Cole DEPUTY POLITICAL EDITOR

BRITAIN would run out of clean drinking water within days of a no-deal Brexit in a doomsday scenario that convinced Michael Gove to back Theresa May’s deal.

Whitehall disaster planners have warned Ministers that leaving the EU without a deal could spark a national crisis as crucial chemicals used in water purificati­on are imported to the UK from Europe.

The deliveries risk getting caught in weeks of border chaos if Britain quits the EU next March without the Prime Minister’s deal with Brussels being approved by MPs.

The vital chemicals are timed to arrive ‘just in time’ and cannot be stockpiled as they are too volatile, meaning water plants would have to turn off the taps as soon as they ran out or risk poisoning millions. Offices and schools would close and hospitals plunged into chaos.

The startling warning is contained in secret Whitehall contingenc­y plans codenamed Operation Yellowhamm­er leaked to this newspaper.

The scale of the devastatio­n outlined by the Government’s Civil Contingenc­ies Secretaria­t is understood to be a key factor in convincing Cabinet Brexiteers led by the Environmen­t Secretary that a deal must be sought at all costs.

Mr Gove has subsequent­ly warned more junior ministeria­l colleagues that he has taken ‘the no deal pill’ and seen how bad things will get and judged that it is not a viable exit route. And friends of the Vote Leave champion said that, as one of the architects of Brexit, he does not want the legacy of the referendum campaign to be death and chaos.

The threat of water shortages in hospitals was also behind Health Secretary Matt Hancock telling the Cabinet that he ‘could not guarantee that people would not die’ in the event of no deal.

A Whitehall source told The Mail on Sunday: ‘This is Project Fear on steroids but it has worked on the Cabinet.’

In order to make water safe to drink, suppliers add chemicals, including fluorosili­cic acid, aluminium sulphate, calcium hydroxide and sodium silicofluo­ride.

The Operation Yellowhamm­er contingenc­y plans warn that if water plants run out of them they ‘would probably need to stop the water supply to all their customers – potentiall­y millions of people’.

The doomsday vision would see householde­rs ‘immediatel­y face a shortage of drinking water and inability to flush toilets, cook, wash clothes or keep themselves clean’.

It adds: ‘Millions of people would not be able to go to work because office buildings, schools and other workplaces would need to close.’

 ??  ?? SWALLOWING HIS PRIDE: Michael Gove has now been convinced that a no-deal exit from the EU would harm Britain
SWALLOWING HIS PRIDE: Michael Gove has now been convinced that a no-deal exit from the EU would harm Britain

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