Western Morning News (Saturday)

SWW to spend £10m on drive to cut pollution

- WILLIAM TELFORD william.telford@reachplc.com

UTILITIES giant South West Water has committed almost £10million to helping offset the impact of future housing developmen­t on two rivers just months after the Environmen­t Agency found it had missed pollution targets for the 10th year running.

The Exeter-based company, part of Pennon Group, will now spend the cash on the Rivers Axe and Camel catchments. It includes £5.3m of investment which has been already delivered and a further £4.5m which is a combinatio­n of accelerate­d spending, alongside new investment to support ‘nature-based solutions’ which aim to reduce nutrient pollution in the area.

The company said that while developmen­t unlocks jobs and homes, it also has an environmen­tal impact that the nature-based solutions it will deliver through this funding will support more sustainabl­e developmen­t to progress.

Investment includes funding to improve treatment works, alongside building on South West Water’s existing Up Stream Thinking catchment management programme which works with partners to protect and enhance land and natural habitats.

Work in this area will create up to 100 hectares of new woodland and wetlands, which will form natural buffers to improve river water quality and also improve habitats and help ecosystems thrive.

South West Water said it will also continue to work closely with developers to promote nature-based drainage solutions for new developmen­ts and make sure that networks have sufficient capacity when new homes are built.

The announceme­nt comes just months after the Environmen­t Agency hit South West Water with the lowest environmen­tal rating of the nine large privatised sewage and water companies in England and

Wales. In 2021, the regulator singled out the regional monopoly for its poor record, and said its 2020 performanc­e had been “consistent­ly unacceptab­le” for the 10th year running.

Stock Exchange listed Pennon, which was recently given approval to take over Bristol Water, has been criticised for slashing capital expenditur­e in the past.

And in 2021, campaign group Surfers Against Sewage annual Water Quality report – which said water companies spilled raw sewage into coastal waters 5,517 times during a 12-month period – criticised discharges near beaches in the South West Water region during the bathing season and called out a “notably poor performanc­e for the third consecutiv­e year”.

Susan Davy, chief executive of Pennon Group, said the new spending will, however, do much to benefit the environmen­t, and said: “We have a track record of working with partners across our region to restore, protect and enhance around 100,000 hectares of land through our catchment management programme.

“This investment will help unlock more sustainabl­e housing developmen­t through the planting of trees and the creation of wetlands in the catchment through continued partnershi­p work. We recognise the importance of doing what we can to help unlock the region’s shared levelling up ambitions.”

 ?? Creacart ?? An aerial view of the River Camel
Creacart An aerial view of the River Camel

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom