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7m tonnes of raw sewage a year discharged into Northern Irish rivers

- Tommy Greene

More than 7m tonnes of raw sewage are being discharged into Northern Ireland’s seas and rivers each year, it has been revealed, and every recorded waterway in the country has been found to be in poor health.

Upwards of 3m tonnes of untreated human waste was found to have been released across the Belfast metropolit­an area, in which more than a third of Northern Ireland’s population resides.

About 200,000 tonnes of sewage are discharged each year in the catchment area for Lough Neagh, where 40% of Northern Ireland’s drinking water is sourced, and about 250,000 tonnes a year is dumped close to the shores of Lough Erne in Fermanagh, near the Irish land border.

The figures are averages based on 20 years of rainfall data. They were released by the infrastruc­ture minister, Nichola Mallon, in response to a question tabled in the assembly by Rachel Woods, the chair of Stormont’s all-party group on climate action.

Woods said: “Northern Ireland is already the 12th worst region in the world for biodiversi­ty loss. These pollution figures indicate that this situation is likely to further decline. With about 100 locations in Northern Ireland’s sewage network currently beyond capacity, our sewage infrastruc­ture requires investment of at least £2bn over the next six years to make it sustainabl­e and fit for purpose. But funding announced by the infrastruc­ture minister this year will start to address the capacity at just 40 sites.”

A spokespers­on for the state-owned company NI Water said: “These overflows are required to reduce the risk of sewage escaping from sewers and causing the flooding of homes, schools and businesses with sewage during periods of heavy rainfall. It is a regulatory requiremen­t that overflows are designed to operate in heavy rainfall conditions; at this time, wastewater in sewer networks is significan­tly diluted with stormwater, protecting public health by preventing outof-sewer flooding in properties.”

A separate report on Northern Ireland’s overall water quality has determined that none of its waterways could be considered in good health under the water framework directive, European legislatio­n designed to improve water quality.

The report documents a considerab­le decline in the condition of 450 rivers, 21 lakes, and 25 “transition­al and coastal water bodies”. A third of Northern Ireland’s rivers achieved “good” status in 2015 and 2018.

The 2021 report does not specify the source of the pollutants identified. But environmen­tal campaigner­s and heads of Northern Ireland’s rivers trusts have linked the findings to sewage spills and slurry runoff from intensive agricultur­e.

Dr John Spence, the secretary of the Erne Rivers Trust, said water management had been neglected by consecutiv­e devolved government­s, and its implicatio­ns for the Republic of Ireland required a cross-frontier strategy.

“The recently released figures on the sewage discharges highlight the magnitude and severity of the problem,” he said. “There are no easy, readymade solutions to this situation. It results from cumulative neglect by successive administra­tions of funding the necessary infrastruc­ture for modern sewage treatment, and also prevalent ‘see nothing, hear nothing, do nothing’ attitudes in the assembly.”

The failure to address water quality improvemen­t goals may incur significan­t economic costs. County Antrim’s north coast, Northern Ireland’s second most popular visitor destinatio­n, recorded around 1.3m tonnes of sewage spillages a year.

Last year NI Water echoed business and constructi­on groups’ concerns when it reported that “chronic underfundi­ng” in Northern Ireland’s wastewater infrastruc­ture was holding back developmen­t in 116 towns and cities. The agency is the only body responsibl­e for running and maintainin­g Northern Ireland’s water and sewerage infrastruc­ture, and its funding comes from the Department for Infrastruc­ture.

A spokespers­on for the Department for Infrastruc­ture said: “This financial year the minister allocated a combined capital and resource budget of some £350m to NI Water for 2021/22. NI Water will need to continue to be fully funded in future years to improve the water and wastewater infrastruc­ture and ultimately reduce the frequency and volume of spills from combined sewer overflows.”The devolved Department of Agricultur­e, Environmen­t and Rural Affairs has been contacted for comment.

 ?? Photograph: Alamy ?? Lower Lough Erne in County Fermanagh.
Photograph: Alamy Lower Lough Erne in County Fermanagh.

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