BLOODY MESS IN ESSEX COST PET FOOD COMPANY ALMOST €12,000

Environmental Panorama
London – UK
May of 2005

 

11/05/2005 - Three and a half tonnes of chicken blood poured from a skip being used to transport it causing a road to be closed for four hours and a smell which made people feel nauseous and wretch.
The smell could be detected for two to three miles, was apparent in local offices for a week afterwards and caused some people to have headaches and be unable to eat.

Emergency vehicles which attended the incident had to be taken out of service for thorough cleaning, many other vehicles had to be pressure washed and disinfected before re-use and one company had to have 40 cars and its car park cleaned as a result of staff driving through the blood.

Colchester Magistrates today fined the pet food company responsible, JG Pears (Newark) Ltd, £10,000 and ordered them to pay £1,992 costs after they admitted causing poisonous, noxious or polluting matter to enter controlled waters, namely an unnamed ditch tributary of the River Colne, at Fordham near Colchester in the County of Essex on or about 26 July 2004, contrary to s85(1) Water Resources Act 1991.

The driver of the skip lorry, Keith Forsdyke, told Environment Agency investigating officers that he had inspected the skip before collection and there were no apparent leaks but he had not driven far from the site in Wormingford when he noticed in his mirror that blood was coming from it.

He pulled into the entrance of an industrial estate to call his bosses to alert the fire brigade and local council. He tried to plug the flow with a piece of sacking but blood flowed down the road and into ditches and the road gulley.

Essex police closed the road to stop vehicles slipping on the spilt blood and the fire service asked people from local businesses to stay inside while they attempted to stop the flow into surface water drains.

While driving to the scene, an Environment Agency officer had to go along a road coated with pools of blood. His car wheels and wheel arches were coated with blood and when he got out of the car the smell was overwhelming.

Congealed blood had become very sticky coating the road and his boots and while taking samples from the ditches the smell had become so overpowering that he wretched for a minute.

Essex Highways Authority spread sand on the road and a road sweeper jetted the surface with water and sucked up the liquid. It took two sweepers to clean it off.

Specialist waste removal contractors had to be brought in to clean up the mess from the ditches with a mechanical digger and it took a week to finish the job. Under Animal By-Products Regulations very few waste sites could deal with the clean-up and the blood had to be incinerated.

Two weeks after the event heavy rainfall caused poultry blood to be washed out from underground pipe work and the specialist company had to return for a further clean up.

Christopher Walmsley, quality manager of JG Pears confirmed to the Environment Agency that about three-and-a-half tonnes of blood had been lost through a split in the end of the skip underneath the valve which ‘appeared to have been caused by impact from a forklift truck.’

Skips are no longer used to transfer chicken blood from the customer’s site. They now use a vacuum tank.

Samples taken from the site showed that the chicken blood in the ditch was about 300 times more polluting than untreated crude sewage and on the roadside was almost 400 times more polluting.

After the hearing Environment Agency Officer Jamie Fairfull said: ‘This incident caused a very acute impact on local businesses and their staff. Fortunately, due to the prompt actions of specialist contractors, emergency services and Environment Agency staff the impact was limited and no long term damage was caused.

‘All companies and householders have a duty to carry and dispose of materials and waste in a responsible manner that does not cause pollution. If they do not then they may face prosecution.

‘The effect of the smell in this case cannot be underestimated. I have never smelt anything worse. It seemed to permeate into everything - it was so bad you could taste it.’

 
 

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

 
 
 
 

 

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