THAMES WATER FINED €60,000 FOR POLLUTING OXFORDSHIRE BROOK

Environmental Panorama
London – UK
April of 2005

 

26/04/2005 - Thames Water was fined £60,000 on 25 April after a blockage at one of its sewage treatment works caused raw sewage to pollute an Oxfordshire brook killing an estimated 12,000 fish.
Oxford Crown Court heard how Thames Water Utilities Ltd, of Clearwater Court, Vastern Road, Reading delayed responding to a blockage at a Sewage Treatment Works despite a series of alarms notifying their control centre that there was a problem. The unmanned sewage treatment works at Cholsey, near Wallingford, Oxfordshire discharged raw undiluted sewage into the Cholsey Brook in September 2003.

The case was originally heard before Didcot Magistrates’ Court on 13 April when Thames Water pleaded guilty but the case was committed to the Crown Court for sentencing.

The incident was caused after a blockage formed at the inlet to the sewage treatment works, causing the undiluted sewage to divert into the plant’s storm tanks. These are designed to operate during wet weather conditions preventing the sewage system from being overloaded with excess water, a discharge from them should only occur during exceptionally wet weather once the high volume of rainfall dilutes the sewage. However this incident occurred toward the end of the long hot summer of 2003 when the concentration of the sewage was high and flows in the Cholsey brook were low.

Oxford Crown Court heard how on Sunday 7 September five alarms were activated at the works during a six-hour period alerting Thames Water staff that sewer levels were high, storm tanks were filling and control mechanisms and pumps were failing. Given the dry weather, staff should have immediately suspected a blockage, however each alarm was looked at individually and the attendance priority was left to the following day. This allowed the tanks to fill to capacity and then discharge their contents untreated into the brook.

The Environment Agency was called to reports that the Cholsey Brook had turned cloudy and had a strange smell. Environment officers arriving at the scene took water quality readings and met up with Thames Water staff who admitted there had been a problem at the sewage treatment works but that it had already been rectified.

The investigating officers walked along a stretch of the brook downstream of the treatment works and noted dissolved oxygen levels, necessary to support aquatic life, were low, and ammonia levels were higher than normal but not critical. The officers could only see a handful of dead fish from the bank.

However, the full extent of the sewage’s impact only became apparent the next day once the pollution had cleared. An Environment Agency fisheries and ecology team was deployed to establish the full extent of the fish kill by using a net to scoop the dead fish entangled in vegetation along the brook’s bed. The study found that the pollutant had had a significant impact killing hundreds of fish including pike, roach, bullheads, and chub as well as over ten thousand sticklebacks.

Senior Enforcement Officer Rod Gould said: “This was entirely avoidable, you can have the most advanced computerised, remote sensing system in the world – but you still need a sufficiently trained and capable human to interpret the readout.

“Thames Water is a multi million pound business and it has already been criticised for its priorities. Whilst an individual alarm may be of a low priority it does not take a genius to work out that five in quick succession from the same works indicating a storm event during one of the driest summers on record should merit an immediate response.

“Thames Water only antagonised the situation by being slow to co-operate with our investigation after the event.”

The case was brought under the Section 58(1) of the Water Resources Act 1991. Thames Water was fined £60,000 and was ordered to pay £4,350 in costs.

Members of the public can report environmental incidents to the Environment Agency by calling freephone 0800 80 70 60.

 
 

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

 
 
 
 

 

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