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Raw sewage reported ‘seeping’ on to beach from Welsh Water pumping station | Raw sewage reported ‘seeping’ on to beach from Welsh Water pumping station |
(32 minutes later) | |
Senedd member demands Welsh Water invest in infrastructure after sewage leaked on to West Shore beach | Senedd member demands Welsh Water invest in infrastructure after sewage leaked on to West Shore beach |
A Senedd member has demanded that Dŵr Cymru, or Welsh Water, invest more money in pumping stations after beachgoers reported raw sewage “seeping” on to a popular beach in north Wales during the peak of the school summer holidays. | A Senedd member has demanded that Dŵr Cymru, or Welsh Water, invest more money in pumping stations after beachgoers reported raw sewage “seeping” on to a popular beach in north Wales during the peak of the school summer holidays. |
The effluent ran on to West Shore, near Llandudno, from under the roller-shutter door of a pumping station at the beach’s car park, Janet Finch-Saunders, MS for Aberconwy, told the Local Democracy Reporting Service. | The effluent ran on to West Shore, near Llandudno, from under the roller-shutter door of a pumping station at the beach’s car park, Janet Finch-Saunders, MS for Aberconwy, told the Local Democracy Reporting Service. |
“It is not acceptable. Our hotels are working flat out to accommodate our visitors. The kids are off school. | “It is not acceptable. Our hotels are working flat out to accommodate our visitors. The kids are off school. |
“This is when residents and visitors want to take a dip in the sea. Surfers Against Sewage are also finding that beaches in north Wales in my constituency have pollution levels that are much too high. | “This is when residents and visitors want to take a dip in the sea. Surfers Against Sewage are also finding that beaches in north Wales in my constituency have pollution levels that are much too high. |
“I’ve written to Welsh Water … They are going to have to invest some money to stop this happening.” | “I’ve written to Welsh Water … They are going to have to invest some money to stop this happening.” |
Dŵr Cymru is a not-for-profit that supplies drinking and wastewater services to most of the country. Data suggests it is the worst offender of all UK water companies for sewage pollution. | Dŵr Cymru is a not-for-profit that supplies drinking and wastewater services to most of the country. Data suggests it is the worst offender of all UK water companies for sewage pollution. |
The company said that the leak had been caused by a blockage but that “foul water” did not reach the beach or “enter any watercourse and had no detrimental environmental impact”. | |
A crew had attended to clear the blockage of wet wipes and carried out a deep cleaning using specialist kit, a spokesperson said, adding that “the issue of sewer abuse and the resulting flooding costs the company around £5m a year”. | |
Last month, the Welsh government body Natural Resources Wales (NRW) found that in 2024, Dŵr Cymru was responsible for the highest number of sewage pollution incidents in a decade – a 42% increase over 10 years. Six serious incidents were recorded, down from seven in 2023. | |
Dŵr Cymru has faced a slew of legal and regulatory action, including a £40m fine in March 2024 from Ofwat which concluded the company had “misled customers and regulators on its performance on leakage and per capita consumption”. | Dŵr Cymru has faced a slew of legal and regulatory action, including a £40m fine in March 2024 from Ofwat which concluded the company had “misled customers and regulators on its performance on leakage and per capita consumption”. |
Urgent changes to the sector promised by NRW include a new monitoring team, guidance on hitting improvement targets linked to new pollution reduction legislation and a tightened framework for annual performance assessments. | Urgent changes to the sector promised by NRW include a new monitoring team, guidance on hitting improvement targets linked to new pollution reduction legislation and a tightened framework for annual performance assessments. |
Under UK government plans to scrap Ofwat, Wales is to get its own water watchdog. It is not yet clear whether this will be a new organisation or whether NRW will take on an expanded role. |
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