Portsmouth News

Langstone Harbour water tests find human and animal faecal bacteria

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Human and animal faecal bacteria have been found in Langstone Harbour on Hayling Island after Havant Borough Council tested the water quality.

This one-off project testing the water showed three of seven test sites were ‘poor’ or ‘insufficie­nt’ and four sites were reported as ‘excellent’ or ‘good’.

The scheme is designed to test the water and get results analysed by experts to enable the council to ask the Environmen­t Agency to monitor the harbour water as if it was bathing water.

The samples were taken during periods of ‘unsettled weather’, some during periods of heavy rain, and tested for E.coli and intestinal enterococc­i because they are both indicators of faecal matter in the water, states the council report.

Excellent water quality was reported at Ferry Point throughout the monitoring period.

Poor water quality was highlighte­d at Harts Farm Way slipway throughout the monitoring period, with water quality being better during the bathing season.

The testing found both human and animal faecal matter in the sampled water, but could not determine how it got into the water, or from where it originated.

The report states it does not know if it is from combined sewerage outflows and sewerage treatment discharges or arising from agricultur­e or other run-off or contaminat­ion.

It advised that swimmers should use the water when the weather is better and not for 72 hours after it rains.

Monitoring was carried out over 19 weeks from May-October 2023 by council officers and Langstone Harbour staff going out into the harbour by rib.

On sampling day, the team collected seven different samples from points across the harbour where there was a high use for recreation­al purposes, ensuring no crossconta­mination took place.

Fifteen were collected in the bathing season (May 15-September 30) and four outside the bathing season (October 5-30).

Portfolio holder for the project, Councillor Elizabeth Lloyd (Con, Stakes), said the samples were barcoded which enabled timesensit­ive tracking to the Porton Down, Defence Science and Technology Laboratory Wiltshire and ensured no deteriorat­ion of the samples.

The lab gave detailed results, which were verified by a leading water quality expert.

Councillor Philipe Munday (Lab, St Faith’s) said he would have liked the opportunit­y to see the actual test results, but they haven’t been presented to the council.

Councillor Mark

Coates (Lab, Hayling East) questioned the ‘wisdom’ of ‘abdicating responsibi­lity’ and not continuing to analyse the water at the Harbour, if another agency does not take on the job.

The council intends to send the report to Southern Water, which was not involved in the project.

A spokespers­on for Southern Water said:

“We are supportive of citizen science and testing programmes that explore water quality across our region and provide a clearer picture about the health of our rivers and seas.”

“We already have a programme for improvemen­ts in the three harbours area (Langstone, Chichester, Pagham) where we’re investing £72m to treat more wastewater, reduce storm overflows and further reduce nutrients from our wastewater treatment works entering the harbours.”

We already have a programme for improvemen­ts in the three harbours area

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 ?? ?? Looking out across Langstone Harbour from Farlington Marshes Picture: Robert Pragnell
Looking out across Langstone Harbour from Farlington Marshes Picture: Robert Pragnell

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