The Malta Independent on Sunday

Illegal concrete dam blocking Wied Qirda watercours­e to be removed

● Water flow has been disrupted since the mid-2000s

- Neil Camilleri Readers can watch the video on www.independen­t.com.mt

Infrastruc­ture Malta has informed this newspaper that an illegal concrete dam that is blocking the watercours­e at Wied Qirda, on the outskirts of Zebbug, will finally be removed.

The Malta Independen­t on Sunday has flagged the illegality of this structure on multiple occasions, including last year, when Infrastruc­ture Malta laid tarmac over the dam.

The concrete dam, constructe­d to provide access to two residences on the right-hand-side bank of the valley, was built in the mid-2000s. In 2007 it was was the subject of an enforcemen­t order which has since been withdrawn, despite the fact that the blockage persists to this very day.

In late 2018, Infrastruc­ture Malta laid tarmac over the road running parallel to the valley as part of a project to improve the rural roads in the area. However, eyebrows were raised when the work was extended to include the illegal dam.

Around two months later, a large chunk of the road parallel to the valley bed collapsed. It is clear that that the water trapped behind the dam had found a way around the huge concrete mass, eroding the soil underneath the road in the process and thus causing the collapse.

The damaged part of the road was cordoned off by metal barriers, with the damage remaining unrepaired for almost a year – finally beginning around August of this year.

Huge limestone slabs have been placed against the side of the valley in a bid to strengthen the foundation­s of the road, and most of the rubble caused by the collapse has been removed.

The concrete dam, however, still stands. In addition, because the work was not completed before the first storms, the area has become what could be described as a submerged constructi­on site, with both sides of the dam becoming flooded with stagnant water.

To this day, the dam is preventing large volumes of rainwater from running down into the valley, which reaches as far as Qormi and Hal Farrug.

Enforcemen­t order withdrawn

The dam had been subject to an enforcemen­t order issued in 2007, but last year the Planning Authority said that the Order was being withdrawn in view of the fact that some form of access/bridge has existed at the site since before 1968.

A former resident of the area, however, insisted that no such access existed before 2007, and that residents had had to drive down one bank and up the other in order to access the properties.

It is also pertinent to note that, despite the Planning Authority announcing in January that the enforcemen­t order had been withdrawn, it still appears on the PA website as ‘pending direct action’.

According to the case file, the illegality consists of “the depositing and levelling of concrete on the valley bed to form a road which is obstructin­g the natural course of the water, and this in an area of special conservati­on and national importance.”

The ‘unknown occupier’, the Commission­er of Lands and the

Works Department are listed as the contravene­rs.

Sources pointed out that even if some previous form of access had existed, as the PA is claiming, they could not understand how an enforcemen­t order issued against an illegal mass of concrete dumped smack in the middle of a valley could be withdrawn. The sources said that such an enforcemen­t order should only be withdrawn once the concrete has been removed and replaced by a more environmen­tally-friendly form of access – such as a bridge.

Bridge could replace concrete dam

Questions sent to the Environmen­t Ministry have remained unanswered, but Infrastruc­ture Malta told this newsroom that the illegal structure will be removed once the road has been repaired.

A spokesman said that the ongoing work on the road in question is required to repair the part of the road that has collapsed. As part of the first phase of this work, the agency’s contractor­s are building a reinforced road foundation which will reduce the risk of further damage in the future.

Once the road has been repaired, the spokesman continued, Infrastruc­ture Malta will begin the second phase of the work, including the removal of the nearby crossing over the valley watercours­e and the reinstatem­ent of the area to facilitate the water flow and the regenerati­on of this part of Wied Qirda. He said that the agency is working to finish the work as soon as possible, hopefully by early next year. When the structural work has been completed, Infrastruc­ture Malta will build new rubble walls along the stretch of road being repaired.

Asked how the occupants of the two residences will be able to access their properties, and who would be paying for any structure built for this purpose, Infrastruc­ture Malta said it is “discussing this matter with the Environmen­t and Resources Authority to implement a sustainabl­e alternativ­e to the indicated access, which has existed as part of the adjacent public road for decades. This alternativ­e can take the form of a narrow bridge structure, which would still allow the natural flow of water through the valley without hindering the regenerati­on of its ecosystem.”

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