Harefield Gazette

A billion litres of raw sewage dumped in a day

THAMES RECEIVES 3.5 BILLION LITRES OF SEWAGE IN 2020

- By LISA HASELDINE

TWO billion litres of untreated sewage was dumped into the River Thames in just two days, a new report has revealed.

The equivalent of 800 Olympicsiz­ed swimming pools in raw sewage was released from Mogden Sewage Treatment Works in Isleworth, West London, across 48 hours last October.

The findings form part of a report published by Parliament’s Environmen­tal Audit Committee (EAC) on the water quality of the UK’s rivers.

According to the report, Mogden, the UK’s third largest sewage treatment works, poured 1 billion litres of contaminat­ed water into the Thames on October 3 and the same amount was dumped on October 4, 2020.

In the whole of 2020, 3.5 billion litres of untreated sewage was poured into the Thames by Mogden.

This was an increase of 600 per cent from 2016 when Mogden spilled 0.5 billion litres of sewage into the river.

In the report, released on January 13, Thames Water chief executive Sarah Bentley said that October 3 and 4 were the wettest days on record with “enough water to fill Loch Ness”. Mogden’s eight storm tanks were unable to cope with the volume of rain, causing sewage to be dumped into the Thames.

Ms Bentley said: “We would have needed either another treatment works the same size as Mogden treating another 1 billion litres or we would have needed 150 more storm tanks [to cope with the rainfall].”

Sewage overflows are legal when sewers are likely to become overwhelme­d. Releasing the sewage into rivers prevents it from backing up into homes and spilling out of toilets and bath plugholes. Residents living close to Mogden have complained about the works for several years.

Councillor Salman Shaheen, who represents the ward of Isleworth for Hounslow Council, said residents were furious to read the report’s findings and called on Thames Water to do more to help Mogden’s deal with increasing sewage.

Cllr Shaheen said: “People are very angry. They are outraged to hear about it because their kids are paddling in the Thames. It really is a treasured resource we have in our part of West London and it is being polluted by a water company.

“Mogden needs to upgrade their facilities. They must increase its storm tank capacity to prevent spillages into the Thames. It can’t be allowed to continue at this level.”

Labour MP for Brentford and Isleworth Ruth Cadbury said: “I’ve supported residents in their campaigns for urgent and sustained action, including calling for Thames Water to expand their capacity and address the crisis of sewage and flood water overwhelmi­ng the Mogden and their other sewage treatment works. Only then can they reduce the need to pump sewage into the Thames.”

A spokespers­on for Thames Water said: “We welcome the findings of the EAC report which brings the collective issues affecting England’s rivers to the fore. We regard all discharges of untreated sewage as unacceptab­le and will work with the government, Ofwat and the Environmen­t Agency to accelerate work to stop them being necessary.

“We have an unpreceden­ted amount of investment directed towards safeguardi­ng our rivers and streams. Between 2020 and 2025 we are spending £1.25 billion on maintainin­g and improving our operationa­l sites. We continue to upgrade Mogden sewage works to help meet growing demand and we have £22 million of investment planned to improve the site’s performanc­e and power generation capabiliti­es.

“Our aim will always be to try and do the right thing for our rivers and for the communitie­s who love and value them. We have a long way to go – and we certainly can’t do it on our own – but the ambition is clear.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? 3.5 billion litres of untreated sewage was dumped into the Thames in 2020
GETTY IMAGES 3.5 billion litres of untreated sewage was dumped into the Thames in 2020

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