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Huge sewage pollution in Scotland linked to Thames Waters
cost-cutting
By Paul Mitchell
24 April 2007
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A pump failure at the Seafield sewage treatment plant near
Edinburgh on Friday has sent millions of gallons of untreated
human excrement into the Forth river estuary. It was 40 hours
before the public was notified.
The failure is linked to a ruthless cost-cutting exercise and
asset-stripping operation mounted by Thames Waters new owners,
Australias Macquaries Bank. In January, the company announced
its intention to sell most of its subsidiaries, including its
Scottish operationsthe Almond Valley, Seafield and Esk private
finance initiative (PFI), Glen Water, Scottish Water Solutions,
Loch Katrine and Thames Water Nevis.
Thames Water was unable to shut down the Seafield plant because
there is no alternative means of treating the sewage from more
than 800,000 people in the region.
Peter Farrer, general manager for Scottish Water, which is
supposed to supervise Thames Water, said, There has been
a catastrophic failure of one of the large pumps at Seafield which
pumps waste water into the treatment works. We have had teams
of engineers working around the clock to try and rectify this
problem.
Farrer said it was not possible to stop the pollution because
the plant was actually designed to pump into the river when emergencies
occur.
A Thames Water spokesperson said, We were unable to repair
the pump on site. The breakdown meant the sewage could not be
directed to the treatment facility. We had to allow an emergency
outflow into the Forthif we had not done that it would have
been directed on to land.
The spokesperson claimed that we have screening so no
solids would have been able to get into the Forth, but later
added, I cant rule out the possibility of excrement
in a semi-solid state being washed up, but weve had no reports
from Sepa [Scottish Environment Protection Agency] about environmental
pollution of that nature.
A Sepa spokesperson said the agency had introduced special
measures to minimise the risk of pollution and put
up notices on beaches in the area telling residents and visitors
to avoid contact with the water.
Gordon Greenhill, head of community safety at Edinburgh City
Council, warned, Any raw sewage has human pathogens in it
which has the capacity to make people ill.
Rob Kirkwood, the chairman of Leith Links Residents Association,
which has campaigned for years about the smell from the plant,
said, It has an infrastructure that is basically Third World
technology.
Simon Arbuthnot told the BBC, I live beside the Firth
of Forth and work beside Seafield sewage plant. The plant is a
disgrace and has been the subject of many complaints for years.
The surrounding area stinks, blamed as usual on old equipment.
The council has repeatedly ignored calls for the plant to be updated
and this major spillage comes as no surprise to many locals who
have known for some time that it is substandard and should have
been closed years ago.
Scotlands First Minister Jack McConnell has called for
an investigation into the spill, saying, It is essential
that Scottish Water and the Scottish Environment Protection Agency,
where they have a role, get on top of this situation and take
the action that is required to secure the coastal area that is
affected.
He called for an immediate investigation into the mechanical
failure that has apparently caused this spillage and what action
needs to be taken as soon as possible to ensure that such a mechanical
failure does not occur again.
It was the Scottish Executive that authorised the formation
of Scottish Water in April 2002 following a merger of the three
former water authoritiesEast, West and North of Scotlandon
the basis of a new public sector model in the UK water industry
and Scottish Water [that] aims to be as efficient and effective
as water companies in the private sector. Scottish Water
boasts that it has cut its operating costs by £366 million
in 2002-2006.
Following its formation, Scottish Water then outsourced the
operation of five sewage treatment plants around Edinburgh to
Thames Water under the Seafield private finance initiative. At
the time, Thames Water said the deal represented A completely
new partnership model in the outsourcing market place.
Late last year, Thames Water was sold to Macquarie for £8
billion. In the run-up to the sale. the company announced that
a quarter of its 4,000 workforce would be made redundant.
Press reports suggest morale in Thames Water and its subsidiaries
is at rock bottom. One manager told the Independent that
many managers are working to rule following an edict
by Thames Waters new chief executive David Owens that they
would not receive a pay rise or a bonus this year, their company
car scheme is to be stopped, and there is an absolute ban on recruitment.
The manager said, The way Thames is behaving will not exactly
motivate managers to meet the targets. The car park empties at
four oclock every day now. People are effectively working
to rule. They see the pay freeze as just an excuse to take money
out of peoples pockets to pay to the new shareholders instead.
Thames Water has the worst leakage rate of any water company,
and the regulator Ofwat has threatened to fine the company if
its performance does not improve this year. In 2005, the company
increased water charges to its customers by 21 percent at the
same time as its former chief executive received a total of £2.66
million for the year and the total remuneration of the four executive
directors soared by 62 percent to £1.26 million.
Thames Water received the biggest fines for pollution in England
and Wales last year after prosecution by the Environment Agency.
During 2005, the company was fined £128,000, including £110,000
for incidents in 2003 when 20,000 fish were killed by sewage pollution.
See Also:
Election manifesto of the
Socialist Equality Party of Britain
[27 March 2007]
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