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More ‘Water, water everywhere…’ (Copyright ST Coleridge)

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Shock news that the water regulator could face the axe and that the UK and Welsh Government (WG) are organising a commission to consider abolition, have highlighted earlier controversies.

Ofwat has been described as a “…toothless water watchdog…” in the UK press, while issues concerning water have been no less controversial in Wales.

After extensive research using figures from Dŵr Cymru Welsh Water (DC WW), it has been proclaimed online: Welsh Water always make a profit. Their directors can earn up to 100% bonus!

“They are correct that they don’t have shareholders but they do have Bond holders who have funded 3.8 billion pounds.

“These bonds are traded on the Luxembourg’s Bourse so no need to disclose shareholders!

“Who does own Welsh Water? Last year correct they didn’t pay dividends, but they did pay £347 million to these bond holders! Some of these bond holders are receiving a fixed rate of 6% others are receiving RPI currently 3.5% +4.4% =7.9% Now you try getting that return on a blue chip investment!”.

For journalists looking at Natural Resources Wales it’s difficult terrain

Last October it was revealed that there had been more than 200 breaches recorded by Natural Resources Wales (NRW) including sewage spills and water quality ‘offences’, however the firm had been fined just TWICE!

In total by that month, the regulator had recorded 223 breaches by DC WW since the start of 2018, according to data from Freedom of Information (FoI) requests by Violation Tracker and shared with WalesOnline (WO).

The Dawnstalkers of Penarth try to keep things clean

James Tennet, of the Dawnstalkers Penarth (DP) swimming group, said it was “deeply depressing to see the extent of environmental harm” caused by the supplier, adding: “As this data shows, they are doing a terrible job at keeping our waterways clean and safe, and still not taking the problem seriously enough… Natural Resources Wales needs to play the role of a real regulator by issuing fines and prosecutions rather than toothless warnings”.

One of the spills may have been near a rare dolphin habitat in Cardigan

The week before this was published The BBC had reported how DC WW had been illegally spilling untreated sewage at dozens of treatment plants for years, including an environmentally protected area near a rare dolphin habitat in Cardigan, and the company has accepted it had between 40 and 50 wastewater treatment plants operating in breach of permits.

According to the information shared with WO one of the worst-performing plants is in that town, where the outflow point spills into the Teifi estuary near a dolphin area.

Alun Moseley, of Surfers Against Sewage (SAS), said it was a “national scandal” that a special area of conservation had seen sewage spilled for more than 200 days each year between 2019 and 2022.

One of the two prosecutions by NRW came in 2019 when DC WW was ordered to pay £49,150 at Swansea Magistrates’ Court after admitting to a chemical discharge which killed more than 500 fish near its Felindre waterworks.

There was a serious pollution incident along the River Clywedog

The other saw the company told to pay £205,871 at Llandudno Magistrates’ Court in 2021 after pleading guilty to causing a pollution incident along the River Clywedog.

A nine kilometre stretch of the river was affected as crude settled sewage spilled from the Five Fords wastewater treatment plant and killed more than 3,000 fish.

According to the data, DC WW’s other infringements include a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) offence, a waste offence under the Environmental Protection Act (EPA), and a breach of the Salmon and Freshwater Fisheries Act.

A picture from Natural Resources Wales’ prosecution of Dŵr Cymru Welsh Water in 2021 following an illegal sewage discharge which killed more than 3,000 fish in the River Clywedog in North Wales

Responding to criticism over the number of prosecutions, Gavin Bown of NRW declared: “While we do prosecute in appropriate cases, the fines handed down by the courts go back to the UK Treasury and not to remediate the environmental problem”.

When there is heavy rain, a wastewater treatment plant is allowed to discharge untreated sewage so it does not become overwhelmed.

But releasing any before a plant reaches the overflow level is an illegal breach of its permit. DCWW has admitted between 40 and 50 of its plants are breaching their permits.

Good reading material…

Perhaps officials have had enough, because a review has been launched which could mean the regulator is axed…

 

The memories of our Editor Phil Parry’s astonishing 41 year award-winning career in journalism (when misdeeds were often reported), as he was gripped by the rare neurological condition Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia (HSP), have been released in a major book ‘A GOOD STORY’. Order the book now!