Every major English water company has reported data suggesting they’ve discharged raw sewage when the weather is dry – a practice which is potentially illegal.
BBC News has analysed spills data from nine firms, which suggests sewage may have been discharged nearly 6,000 times when it had not been raining in 2022 - including during the country’s record heatwave.
Water companies can release untreated sewage into rivers and seas when it rains to prevent it flooding homes, but such spills are illegal when it’s dry.
The firms say they understand public concerns around dry spilling, but they disagree with the BBC’s findings.
They have said the spill data shared with the Environment Agency was “preliminary” and “unverified”, and also disagree with how the BBC defined a dry spill, which they say differs from the Environment Agency’s approach.
The latest findings follow a BBC investigation conducted last year which found 388 instances of possible dry spilling in 2022 by three water companies - Thames, Wessex and Southern - after they shared their data with the BBC.
The other six – Anglian Water, Northumbrian Water, Severn Trent, South West Water, United Utilities and Yorkshire Water - had refused to share data about when they might be spilling with the BBC. They said it could prejudice an ongoing criminal investigation by the Environment Agency (EA) and Ofwat into their activities.
The regulator – the Environment Agency – which had the data, disagreed, and in January handed it to the BBC.
LNRDrone@sopuli.xyz 6 months ago
What the fuck? Having to ever discharge raw sewage at all sounds like there’s something clearly wrong with the infrastructure, but 6000 times a year? That sounds like releasing raw sewage is just a part of their every day water treatment plan at this point.
tal@lemmy.today 6 months ago
This is very common, unless you live in a very young city. It’s due to the use of combined sewers, which were around until comparatively recently due to the evolution of cities.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combined_sewer
In the US, unless you’re west of the Mississippi, there’s good odds that your city may still have combined sewers. If you’re in Europe, there’s very good odds that you have combined sewers.
Cities are very slowly moving to sewers that are separate from rainwater systems, but it’s costly, since two intermingled systems have to be untangled and it’s under a whole city.