Eustace by name, Useless by nature !!!

Discussion in 'U.K.' started by Vladimir Illich, Aug 27, 2022.

  1. Vladimir Illich

    Vladimir Illich Lifetime Supporter Lifetime Supporter

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    So, the Environment Secretary has laboured and produced a plan to deal with waste water and sewerage being discharged into the sea, BUT the plan won't come to full fruition until 2050 !!!


    Eustice defends sewage spill plan branded ‘cruel joke’ by critics

    Amy Gibbons, PA Political Correspondent
    27 August 2022, 11:00 am


    The Environment Secretary has defended the Government’s new plan to crack down on damaging sewage spills after critics branded the proposals a “cruel joke”.

    George Eustice said he was the first Secretary of State to “really grip” the issue after ministers announced water companies will be expected to invest £56 billion over 25 years to combat the impact of storm overflows on England’s seas and rivers.

    Firms will face new targets to “revolutionise our sewer system”, including improving all overflows releasing into, or near, every designated bathing water, and 75% of those discharging to high priority sites, by 2035.

    By 2050, no storm overflows will be permitted to operate outside of unusually heavy rainfall or to cause any adverse ecological harm.


    We're announcing the largest infrastructure programme in water company history to crack down on sewage spills and end pollution.

    Read more about our Storm Overflows Discharge Reduction Plan: Toughest targets ever introduced will crack down on sewage spills#EnvironmentAct #Sewage pic.twitter.com/4nBxtUGoOm

    — Defra UK (@DefraGovUK) August 26, 2022

    Consumers will not pay any extra towards such measures until 2025, however it is anticipated there will be a cost to follow, according to the plan, with modelled bill increases averaging £12 per year between 2025 and 2030.

    Mr Eustice said he thought people would view this as a price “worth paying”.

    The document says it is expected that annual water bills averaged over the whole period to 2050 would eventually rise by £42 per year compared to current prices.

    It comes after dozens of pollution warnings were issued for beaches and swimming spots in England and Wales last week following heavy rain that overwhelmed the sewage system.

    Mr Eustice said storm overflow outlets – of which there are 15,000 in England – are “a legacy of the Victorian sewerage infrastructure”.

    These sewerage systems release excess sewage and rainwater when under strain to prevent sewers becoming overloaded and backing up into homes.

    [​IMG]
    Campaigners march from Fistral Beach, Newquay, as they take part in a National Day of Action on Sewage Pollution (Ben Birchall/PA)
    The Environment Secretary told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “There are around 15,000 of these storm overflows and, as I said, they are a legacy of the Victorian infrastructure we had.

    “You could argue that governments down the decades should have prioritised this, but this Government – with me as Secretary of State, and Boris Johnson as Prime Minister – is the first government to actually tackle this problem.”

    On the cost to consumers, Ms Eustice said: “The reason that this decision has been put off by subsequent governments, both Labour and Conservative, down the decades is that there’s been a big focus on keeping water bills down, and that’s entirely understandable.

    “Now Ofwat, the regulator, pushes every water company incredibly hard to ensure that we get more for less money to try to drive down the income that they’re able to raise for the capital that they raise in the market.

    “But at the end of the day, if you do want to improve the sewage infrastructure that we have, so that we can reduce the number of discharges we have, significantly reduce it, there’s a cost obviously to that.”
    He added: “There will be no increase in water bills until 2025 and a modest increase on average until 2030 of £12 per year per household.

    “And I think that most people would see that that is a price that is worth paying in order to clean up our waters and improve this infrastructure that we have.”

    The Liberal Democrats have branded the plan “a cruel joke” and claimed their analysis of the proposals shows that by 2030 there will still be 325,000 sewage dumps a year on Britain’s beaches, as well as in lakes, rivers and chalk streams.

    The party’s environment spokesman, former leader Tim Farron, accused the Government of planning to hike water bills to pay for “cleaning up the mess made by water companies”.

    “Whilst they roll in the cash, we swim in sewage. The whole thing stinks,” he said.

    Labour called the plan “fiction”, with shadow environment secretary Jim McMahon saying: “Britain deserves better than a zombie Tory government that is happy for our country to be treated as an open sewer.”
     

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