CONTRACTOR FINED FOR POLLUTING RIVER

Environmental Panorama
London – United Kingdom
October of 2005

 

07/10/2005 - The Environment Agency is reminding businesses that they could face fines if they are found to be illegally polluting controlled waters.

This follows the successful prosecution of AE Yates Trenchless Solutions Limited, of Cranfield Road, Lostock Industrial Estate, Lostock, Bolton, which was fined £2,1000 at Wirral Magistrates Court on Friday September 30 and also ordered to pay £2,496.88 costs to the Agency.

The company pleaded guilty to allowing silty water to enter a ditch, which connects with Clatter Brook near Raby Mere, Wirral. The point of discharge was upstream of Foxes Wood Nature Reserve, a designated Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) on account of its flora and fauna. The brook is a tributary of Dibbensdale Brook, which flows through Spital Road Country Park, also designated as SSSI.

In sentencing the fine was reduced from £4,000 for giving a prompt guilty plea for the offence.

The Court was told that on 22 September 2004 an Environment Officer investigated two reports from the public that Clatter Brook was flowing red/orange/brown. The officer inspected the brook where it flows under Poulton Hall Road Bridge and saw that the brook was bright orange. He began to trace the brook upstream and confirmed it was a cloudy orange colour for its whole length.

Further investigation of AE Yates Trenchless Solutions discovered that they were digging a tunnel under the M53 motorway as part of improvement works on behalf of United Utilities. The problem occurred because a soakaway area surrounding the works had overflowed. This meant groundwater, which had entered into the excavations and become contaminated with silt entered a ditch and contaminated the brook through an outfall pipe, rather than being drained off.

The company took action to block off the route to the brook and suspended work until measures were in place to deal with the silty water arising from its excavation.

The silty water affected two miles of the watercourse. Water samples confirmed that the discharge from the site contained high levels of suspended solids, which can blanket out light and oxygen to bed-living plants and aquatic life. Sedimentation can also affect the make-up of the stream bed and reduce habitats.

The company asked for a second similar offence to be taken into consideration. The court heard that on 6 October the Agency’s officer returned to site to carry out dye testing as part of the ongoing investigation of the first incident. Whilst on site the officer observed another outfall pipe discharging cloudy orange water, similar in colour to that observed on 22 September 2004.

Further investigation established that following the first incident the company had been collecting the silty water in a series of settlement lagoons and then carrying it by tanker to the other side of the motorway for disposal on a larger area of land. However, one tanker load was deposited in an area not previously used for spreading and entered a recently installed land drain connecting to the brook.

Environment Officer Simon Oldfield said: "The company started the activities on site in the knowledge that it would have to deal with groundwater infiltration into its excavations. The site is bounded by two local watercourse, Clatter brook and Thornton Brook. It was the company’s responsibility to investigate the proximity of local watercourses and whether there was a possibility that its works could affect them.

"The company could have asked the Agency for advice. If they had consulted with the Agency prior to starting the works, the proximity of the watercourses would have been highlighted and the Agency would have recommended the company carry out a thorough investigation of the site drainage and the suitability of the ground to cope with the large volumes of pumped silty water. The company could then have made adequate arrangements in advance for the disposal of the silty water arising on site and the pollution incidents could have been avoided."

Following the incidents the company carried out its own investigation. It concluded that the pumping of water to land required constant monitoring to make sure the land did not become saturated allowing water to run off into areas that could cause pollution. It also recognised that careful examination of the proposed soakaway area was necessary to make sure there was no direct access to any land drainage.

 
 

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

 
 
 
 

 

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