South Wales Echo

Outrage over water firms’ sewage spills

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WATER companies have released raw sewage into UK rivers and seas almost 150 times during dry weather – despite being told to do so only when there is heavy rainfall, according to campaigner­s.

Analysis by campaign group Surfers Against Sewage (SAS) of discharge alerts and meteorolog­ical data shows so-called “dry spills” occurred at least 146 times “at a conservati­ve estimate” when there was no rain recorded between October last year and September.

The spills are intended to occur only during times of exceptiona­l rainfall to help the sewage network cope, with releases at other times a potential breach of water firms’ permits.

Some 95 of the dry spills were at locations where water quality was classified as ‘excellent,’ making “a mockery of the categorisa­tion system for designated bathing waters in the UK”, the SAS report said.

Southern Water was responsibl­e for four times as many dry spills as the next worst offender, South West Water, SAS said.

Over the same period, SAS issued 9,216 sewage pollution alerts via its Safer Seas & Rivers Service, which covers more than 450 beach and river spots across the UK and is designed to help the public make informed decisions about where and when they swim, surf or paddle.

A quarter (2,053) were during the 2022 bathing season and 39% of sickness cases reported to SAS correlated with the alerts, the group said.

The SAS report comes ahead of data expected next week from the Environmen­t Agency, which will reveal the frequency and duration of sewage discharges in England this summer.

There has been growing public outrage in recent years at the volume of raw or partially treated sewage pumped into the UK’s rivers and coastal waters. SAS head of campaigns and policy Amy Slack said: “Over the last year, the UK public has made clear their disgust at what’s happening to our rivers and seas, and yet water companies continue to pollute at will.

“It’s especially alarming to uncover evidence of potentiall­y illegal activity by water companies in the form of ‘dry spills,’ which are not permitted under current regulation­s. Shareholde­rs and CEOs are unashamedl­y profiteeri­ng off pollution.

“The Government is complicit in the sewage scandal, failing to enforce and strengthen regulation­s to protect the health of the UK’s waterways – and the health of its citizens. Politician­s are simply kicking the can down the road, legitimisi­ng sewage pollution for the next 27 years through the sewage action plan published this summer.

“It’s high time the Government stepped up and took real action to curb the destructiv­e and selfish behaviour of the water companies responsibl­e for this literal shitstorm.”

A Southern Water spokesman said: “Storm releases, which go a long way to reduce the impact of the type of flooding we have seen recently, and which are permitted by the Environmen­tal Agency, reduced by nearly 50% this year compared to last, in part due to a dry summer.”

 ?? EMILY WHITFIELDW­ICKS/PA WIRE ?? Surfers against Sewage protester
EMILY WHITFIELDW­ICKS/PA WIRE Surfers against Sewage protester

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