Campaigners protest treated sewage water plan
Campaigners say Southern Water is ignoring cheaper, more
sustainable alternatives
A
protest has been held over a £1.2bn Southern Water project,
which would see waste water from sewage treatment turned
into drinking water.
Dozens of residents gathered near Langstone Harbour,
Hampshire, where a recycling plant could be built to treat
the water.
The
water firm says the process would mean much less water being
taken from the environmentally sensitive Rivers Test and
Itchen.
Campaigners say Southern Water is ignoring cheaper and more
sustainable alternatives.
Southern Water is currently consulting on plans to build a
recycling plant in Havant and associated underground
pipelines and pumping stations.
A public consultation on the proposals, external runs
until Tuesday.
Members of campaign group Havant Matters held placards at
the gathering on Saturday, with messages for the company.
"Southern Water Stinks," read one, while another read: "We
Don't Trust Southern Water."
Photo showing several people gathering by waterfront with
banners - one says Southern Water StinksOnce treated, the
recycled water would be pumped to Havant Thicket Reservoir,
which is currently being built, then piped 25 miles (40km)
to Otterbourne, where it would be treated again and supplied
to customers.
The
recycling plant would be built on a former landfill site,
close to Langstone Harbour.
Speaking at the protest on Saturday, Bob Comlay,
Solent Protection Society's vice chair, said he was
concerned about the impact on the harbour and the Solent.
He said the process would produce waste of "highly
concentrated warm brine, which contains solid residue from
filtration".
This by-product would be released "in the
middle of the Solent" via a long sea outfall pipe, he said,
adding: "There will be impacts."
'Waste of public money'
Environmental advisor Tracey Viney said Southern Water could
spend the money on "much more sustainable projects, much
closer to where the water is needed".
She
said: "You could build three reservoirs for the same price
as this scheme and they would last 200 years.
This won't be around in 60 years, so it's a complete
waste of public money. We get plenty of rain, we just need
to find better ways of collecting it."
'Drier than Dallas'
Southern Water's managing director of water, Tim McMahon,
said: 'We need to do this. It's not really a choice.
"The
South East is water scarce. It's drier than Dallas, Istanbul
and Sydney. We need 2.5 billion litres of water extra per
day by 2050 to meet demand and protect the environment."
He
said alternatives had been looked into and would be
developed in future but said the water recycling and
transfer project was the best option.
He
said modelling showed the reject water produced in the
process would have no environmental impact.
Map
with graphics showing the process behind the recycling plans
IMAGE SOURCE,SOUTHERN WATER
The
recycled water would be pumped to Havant Thicket Reservoir,
which is currently being built
Water recycling is used in other countries and other
water companies in the UK are considering using it.
Mr
Mahon said Southern Water would be making "incredibly
purified water".
"We
put it through a membrane that's 50 times smaller than a
human hair to reduce the chemicals and salts in it," he
said. We'll
then mix it in the reservoir with spring water and that goes
back into the water plant to get treated to the normal
standards. It makes it better probably than people are
drinking today."
Following a public consultation, Southern Water will submit
a development consent order application next year.
The
project is deemed to be of national significance so the
environment secretary will decide if it can proceed to an
examination stage and ultimately
BBC South Today
22nd July
Page updated:
Sunday August 04, 2024