Panorama
 
 
 
   
 
 

ENVIRONMENT AGENCY TACKLES OIL POLLUTION IN WHITEHAVEN HARBOUR

Environmental Panorama
London – UK
April of 2005

 

05/04/2005 - The Environment Agency has taken steps to tackle pollution and litter problems in Whitehaven Harbour.
The Agency, working with Whitehaven Harbour Commission and Whitehaven Development Company, has installed an oil boom – a kind of floating barrier which traps oil and debris.

Situated below the culverted outfall in the harbour’s Queen’s Town Dock, the boom was fitted by a team of divers and is designed to float on the surface of the water, rising and falling with the tide.

Whitehaven Harbour has played a central role in the regeneration of the town in recent years, putting Whitehaven firmly on the tourist map and proving popular with local people, shoppers and boat owners alike. However, the Environment Agency and the Harbour Commission have been concerned about oil and litter entering the harbour from the town’s main culverts.

Environment Agency Officer Duncan Fyfe, who has been leading the investigations to establish the sources of the pollution in the harbour, said: "Oil affects the water environment in a number of ways. Not only is it unsightly and the cause of unpleasant smells, it is also harmful to wildlife.

"Birds are particularly vulnerable because oil damages their naturally waterproof feathers, and because they tend to ingest oil during preening. Oil also reduces the oxygen levels in the water and taints the flesh of fish which are exposed to it."

The careless disposal of litter is also a problem, as it is washed into the town’s surface water drains, which discharge into the harbour. Everyone who visits the harbour can help reduce the amount of litter that makes its way into the water, by using the litter bins on the harbour front.

Whitehaven Harbour Master Neil Foskett said: "The boom will contain any oil and litter entering the harbour from this culvert, making the clean-up of the harbour much easier and reducing the impact of oil pollution by stopping it from spreading."

The widespread use of oil in large quantities means that there are more opportunities for spills and accidental pollution incidents involving oil than other any chemical pollutant. The main causes of oil pollution are leaks from storage facilities and spills during delivery.

However, the Agency’s Duncan Fyfe believes there is another source of oil pollution that lies closer to home.

"Careless disposal of used oil from car maintenance, or even cooking oil, is likely to be a major source," he explains. "If you change the oil in your car just once, the waste oil is enough to form a film over a four-acre lake. Less than a third of all waste oil produced by motorists carrying out their own car maintenance is recycled – that means that about 13 million litres of waste oil is are lost to the environment every year.

"Oil should be disposed of correctly, by taking it to an oil recycling bank."

The floating oil boom is just part of a larger Environment Agency project to address the problem of pollution in Whitehaven Harbour from the town’s surface water system. The aim of the project is not only to deal with the pollution when it occurs, with measures such as the oil boom, but also to find out exactly where the pollution is coming from so it can be avoided in the first place.

The Environment Agency would like to thank the Whitehaven Harbour Commission and the Whitehaven Development Company for their involvement in the project.

Notes

It is an offence under section 85 of the Water Resources Act 1991 to cause or knowingly permit polluting matter to enter a controlled watercourse. The Environment Agency takes such offences very seriously and can prosecute offenders, who can be faced with fines of up to £20,000 or six months’ imprisonment.

The Agency has already identified ‘cross-connections’ as a major source of pollution in the harbour, where household drainage systems have been wrongly connected so that dirty water goes to surface water drains and ultimately, rivers and streams instead of the sewer system.

 
 

Source: Environment Agency – United Kingdom (http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk)
Press consultantship
(Joanne Sheppard)
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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