SEVERN TRENT WATER FINED €20,000 FOR SEWAGE LEAK

Environmental Panorama
London – United Kingdom
August of 2005

 

30/08/2005 - Severn Trent Water has admitted allowing two polluting discharges of untreated sewage into a Lincolnshire river.
The company admitted two charges of breaching section 85 of the Water Resources Act of 1991 and was fined £10,000 for each incident with £4,624 costs at Gainsborough Magistrates Court. They also asked for one further offence to be taken into consideration.

About 7,000 fish were killed at the Heapham Fishing Lakes near Gainsborough in April 2004 when sewage escaped from Severn Trent Water sewers into a tributary of the River Till, which runs through the fishery...

The sewage in the lake significantly reduced oxygen levels and increased ammonia levels making it impossible for the fish to survive, magistrates were told.

Many of the fish killed, including carp, bream, roach, perch, rudd and ide, were large specimens worth a lot of money to the owners of the fishery. No water dwelling birds were seen at the lake although invertebrates did not appear to be affected.

Severn Trent Water deployed ten aerators working 24 hours a day for almost four weeks to increase oxygen levels in the lake. Pipes connecting the affected lake with a second lake at the fishery also had to be blocked to prevent contamination spreading.

The sewage in the lake significantly reduced oxygen levels and increased ammonia levels making it impossible for the fish to survive, magistrates were told. No water dwelling birds were seen at the lake although invertebrates did not appear to be affected.

Many of the fish killed, including carp, bream, roach, perch, rudd and ide, were large specimens with a reasonably high market value.

Severn Trent had to use ten aerators working 24 hours a day for almost four weeks to increase oxygen levels in the lake. Pipes connecting the affected lake with the second Heapham lake also had to be blocked to prevent contamination spreading.

The Environment Agency estimated that at least 70 per cent of the stock, equating to approximately 7,000 fish, had been wiped out and that remaining fish may also have been damaged by the high ammonia levels.

On April 23 there were two separate blockages in the local foul sewer causing sewage to get into surface water drains which is designed to carry rainwater from built up areas into receiving watercourses. These led to a discharge of sewage into the River Till tributary causing pollution over a 5km stretch.

The day after, there was another blockage within the foul sewer causing sewage to discharge from a different outfall into the same stream. Severn Trent Water asked the magistrates to take this offence into account when passing sentence.

The Angling Club restocked the affected lake at the beginning of August 2004 with 160 pounds of big carp, bream, roach, rudd, ide and tench. However, a second, subsequent escape of sewage from the same outfall as the incident in April killed much of the new stock barely two weeks after it had been introduced.

Severn Trent Water pleaded guilty to:

1) On or about 23 April 2004 you did cause poisonous, noxious or polluting matter to enter controlled waters, namely a tributary of the River Till at Gainsborough in the County of Lincolnshire.

Contrary to s85(1) and s85(6) Water Resources Act 1991

2) Between 15 August 2004 and 19 August 2004 you did cause poisonous, noxious or polluting matter to enter controlled waters, namely a tributary of the River Till at Gainsborough in the County of Lincolnshire.

Contrary to s85(1) and s85(6) Water Resources Act 1991

After the hearing Environment Agency Team Leader Phil Hukin said: ‘This case highlights the significant damage that can occur when raw sewage is discharged into our rivers.

‘What was of particular concern in this case was the fact that there had been several incidents in the same area over a short time. Although they appeared to be unrelated, they resulted in the deaths of thousands of fish and a reduction in water quality.

‘Water companies have a duty to ensure that the systems they use are properly maintained and inspected to ensure their ongoing integrity and to prevent such incidents.’

 
 

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

 
 
 
 

 

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