Coastlines face MORE sewage pollution ahead of bank holiday

Coastlines face even MORE sewage pollution ahead of bank holiday weekend, campaign group warns as they issue 654 alerts for sewer overflows this summer

  • The risk of more sewage pollution could get worse with the south west and south coast of England worst hit
  • Surfers Against Sewage data show 654 alerts of sewer overflows from 171 locations in England and Wales
  • Last week’s heavy rain overwhelmed the sewage system and caused 100 alerts for pollution

Campaigners have warned of the risk of more sewage pollution on coastlines ahead of the bank holiday as they called for greater ambition to conserve rivers and seas.

Data from campaign group Surfers Against Sewage (SAS) shows 654 alerts of sewer overflows spilling sewage into bathing waters this summer, from 171 locations in England and Wales.

Last week, as heavy rain falling after weeks of dry weather overwhelmed the sewage system, there were 100 alerts for pollution, the data shows, with the south west and south coast of England worst hit.

With rain forecast again for parts of England in the next couple of days, SAS chief executive Hugo Tagholm said: ‘We wouldn’t be surprised if we saw more pollution events along the south coast where there’s rainfall.’

Data from campaign group Surfers Against Sewage (SAS) shows 654 alerts of sewer overflows spilling sewage into bathing waters this summer, from 171 locations in England and Wales

He said it did not take exceptionally heavy rainfall for raw sewage to be flushed out in storm overflows, and urged people to check the SAS Safer Seas and Rivers Service app which gives real time alerts of pollution incidents.

With the app, he said: ‘People are forewarned, they can make a decision to go somewhere that’s not affected, to have a good time at the beach.’

Data from the app shows the most affected areas this summer have been Longrock, Cornwall and Scarborough on the Yorkshire coast with 19 warnings each, followed by Cowes on the Isle of Wight with 16, and Spittal, Northumberland and Walney Biggar Bank in Cumbria, with 14 each.

There has been growing public outrage in recent years at the volume of raw or partially treated sewage pumped into the UK’s rivers and coastal waters.

Mr Tagholm said sewage pollution was a public health issue and one that affected wildlife, and was linked to the climate crisis which is driving more extreme weather of very dry or wet conditions.

In the last decade, there had been a reduction in investment in sewage infrastructure in England and defunding of regulators, with water companies left in charge of self-monitoring, he said.

Last week, as heavy rain falling after weeks of dry weather overwhelmed the sewage system, there were 100 alerts for pollution, the data shows, with the south west and south coast of England worst hit

‘We need more ambition to have clean, thriving rivers, the best bathing waters in Europe, if not the world, and make sure the water companies are investing far more of their vast profits in protecting and restoring our wild blue spaces that people rely on for their health, well-being and local economies,’ he said.

And he said that over the years, water companies had spent £5 billion to upgrade water infrastructure but had taken £70 billion in dividends, and solving the issue was affordable for them.

The Government should cap dividends, profits and bonuses until the situation was sorted out, he urged.

A Water UK spokesperson said: ‘Water companies agree there is an urgent need for action to tackle the harm caused to the environment by spills from storm overflows and wastewater treatment works.

‘They are investing over £3bn to improve overflows as part of a wider national programme to improve the environment between 2020 and 2025.

‘However, companies want to go further, faster and are pushing to be able to spend more, and for processes to be streamlined so that investment can be quickly targeted where it is needed most.

‘Any new investment must be combined with action from Government on wet wipes and urban creep that are increasingly triggering spills.

‘Water companies can’t do this alone which why we’re also calling for Government, regulators, water companies, agriculture and other sectors to come together as soon as possible to deliver a comprehensive national plan to bring about the transformation in our rivers and waterways we all want to see.’

Britain’s beauty spots continue to be plagued by pollution, after dog walkers found foul smelling oil dumps, sheep manure led to swimming being banned at a Devon beach and E.coli was discovered in a river in Kent. 

With rain forecast again for parts of England in the next couple of days, SAS chief executive Hugo Tagholm said: ‘We wouldn’t be surprised if we saw more pollution events along the south coast where there’s rainfall’

In Greater Manchester a ‘foul smelling’ oil was dumped along a walking trail in the Prestwich Clough Woodland Trust, prompting concern from locals who say the potent odour and greasy pollution is ‘ruining the area.’

Meanwhile, Selaine Saxby, the MP for North Devon, has confirmed that people were told not to go into the water at Saunton Sands beach in the county after it was polluted by sheep manure.

The faeces, which had dried out in the extreme heat of the last couple of months, were washed into the water after heavy rain caused flash floods.

The Environment Agency urged people not to swim in the water, and said that on investigation the manure did not appear to come from leaks in water company pipes. It said the water has since been cleared for swimming. 

The investigation at the woodland comes just days after the agency revealed diesel fuel had been dumped at the River Helford near Port Navas, a small village in Cornwall.

On top of this, alarming levels of potentially deadly E.coli bacteria were found in a section of the River Stour, which is popular with swimmers and canoeists in Kent.

Analysts have also said that sewage leaks could affect British seafood after sewage was dumped into coastal waters where shellfish live almost 29,000 times last year.

Sewage was dumped into coastal waters where shellfish live almost 29,000 times last year, an analysis has revealed.

Untreated waste was released into English waters containing oysters, mussels and clams for more than 207,000 hours in 2021, a study found.

The longest ‘dump event’ at Morecambe Bay, south of the Lake District in the north-west, lasted 5,000 hours.  

Experts warn that contaminated shellfish are a source of bacteria and viruses that pose a risk to human health.

Whitstable oyster harvesting was halted due to sewage, amid reports of norovirus-type symptoms in those who ate them.

The Kent town – famed for its oysters – is supplied by Southern Water, which was fined a record £90million last year.

David Jarrad, head of the Shellfish Association, said of the Liberal Democrats’ findings: ‘Sewage flowing into water that contains shellfish runs the risk they will then contain E. coli or norovirus.

‘Consumers won’t trust shellfish if that is the case.’

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