ENVIRONMENT AGENCY INVESTIGATES GREY
FUNGUS OUTBREAK IN RIVER CRANE


Environmental Panorama
International
February of 2010


The Environment Agency is investigating an outbreak of grey fungus in the River Crane - The Environment Agency is investigating an outbreak of grey fungus in the River Crane, along with an unusual smell, after receiving a number of reports from members of the public in North Feltham and Twickenham.

Environment Agency officers have been out investigating the cause of the fungus and have taken a number of samples and water quality readings from the river. Officers have identified the outbreak as a grey fungus, which grows on the river bed when the right nutrients are there to feed it.

Colonies of grey fungus in watercourses are associated with discharges of organic matter rather than substances that are harmful or toxic to people. When conditions are right, the grey fungus grows and covers the river bed like a blanket affecting the organisms that live in and around the water. Biodiversity teams are also investigating the impact this is having on wildlife in the area.

Sarah Mills, environment management team leader said “We would like to assure the local community that we are doing a thorough investigation into what is causing this and taking every action to confirm the source of the problem. If you come into contact with the river water you should wash your hands and be sure not to put them in your mouth.

“The reports we have received from the local community have been very valuable in assisting us with our investigations so far. Due to the extent of the coverage of the grey fungus we know we are looking for a prolonged and sustained source of nutrient release into the river. Once we have confirmation of our sample results, we are confident that we will be able to identify the source which is causing the grey fungus to grow and stop it.

“The public are our eyes and ears and provide us with vital information. If you have any further information about this problem, or ever see anything that you think is harming the environment, please call our incident hotline on 0800 807060 (Freephone, 24 hour).
Environment Agency statement: Court of Appeal decision on Thames Water fine appeal
Commenting on the Court of Appeal’s decision earlier today to reduce the fine imposed on Thames Water from £125,000 to £50,000, Dr Paul Leinster, Environment Agency Chief Executive, said:

“We are disappointed that the Court of Appeal reduced the level of the fine. The pollution caused by Thames Water in 2007 spread for nearly 5 km of the River Wandle, and had a catastrophic impact on the local wildlife. This incident saw 20 years of careful river restoration work decimated in a matter of hours.

“In serious pollution incidents such as this, we would still like to see higher fines in addition to any action taken by the offending company, to provide a stronger deterrent to polluters. There are still an average of two serious pollution incidents a day and this is two too many. Of these water companies are responsible for more than one serious pollution incident a week.

"But we welcome the incentive this decision creates for polluters to put right the damage they cause, quickly and voluntarily. The Court recognised that ‘the failures in this case make the offence an extremely serious one of its type’. As a result, the Court considered that a fine of £250,000 to £300,000 would have been appropriate, as well as an order for compensation.

“The main reason the Court decided to reduce the fine so significantly today was because of the steps Thames Water took to put right the environmental damage they had caused. The court took into account Thames Water's ‘unprecedented payment and pledge of the total sum of £500,000’ for local restoration and environmental improvement projects.

“New civil sanctions powers which we expect to receive in the next few months will also give us a more flexible toolkit to require businesses that cause pollution to pay for the cost of repairing the damage.”

ENDS
Media enquiries: 020 7863 8710. Outside normal office hours, please contact the National Duty Press Officer on 07798 882 092.

NOTES TO EDITORS:
Thames Water was fined £125,000 and ordered to pay £21,335 in clean up and investigation costs in January 2009 after pleading guilty to allowing a large quantity of industrial strength chlorine to spill into the River Wandle, wiping out two decades of painstaking river restoration.
The spill originated from its Beddington Sewage Treatment Works near Mitcham, South London in September 2007.
The pollution spread downstream for nearly 5km and had a catastrophic impact, killing the majority of the fish in the river. It took three days to remove some two tonnes of dead fish from the river. The incident also affected the Wandle’s highly valued recreational areas such as Poulter Park, Ravensbury Park and the National Trust site at Morden Hall Park.
The River Wandle is a well known chalk stream and tributary of the River Thames that flows through parts of Mitcham, Morden, Wimbledon and Wandsworth in South West London, cutting a green swathe through these heavily urbanised areas. Historically the river has suffered extreme pollution and was officially declared a sewer in the 1960s. But over the last 20 years it has become a vibrant rich habitat due to better environmental regulation, a fish stocking programme and huge local enthusiasm for the river which has resulted in a vast improvement of water quality.
At the time it was estimated that the river could take up to 10 years to recover.

 
 

Source: Environment Agency – United Kingdom
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