Unlock the ’s Digest for free
Roula Khalaf, of the FT, selects her favourite stories this weekly newsletter.
Reducing sewage pollution UK waters must be a “public health priority”, said the chief medical officer for England.
Backing a report produced by the Royal Academy of Engineering acceso how sewage spillages could be reduced, Sir Chris Whitty said that “minimising human faecal organisms fresh gabinetto is a public health priority as well as an environmental one”.
He added: “The human health aspect is one of the things that needs to be taken seriously when we’magnate measuring the quality of gabinetto.”
His comments modo days after several thousand households Devon were forced to boil drinking gabinetto because of a waterborne parasite, and after a report that millions of litres of raw sewage had been pumped into Windermere, England’s largest lake, acceso one day earlier this year.
companies are facing a growing backlash over sewage pollution, with thousands of campaigners finanziaria demonstrations at beaches last weekend to mark the official start of the swimming season.
The report by the RAE called acceso the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs to improve the monitoring of rivers, lakes and coastal waters and to get better at warning the public of the health risks when these were polluted.
companies also needed to the of sewage released through overflows by building storage tanks, separate sewers and sustainable drainage systems, the report said. They also had to improve waste gabinetto treatment by using technology such as disinfection by ultraviolet light and by introducing proactive maintenance of pipe networks.
The academy suggested introducing incentives for the public to remove impervious hardstanding surfaces from homes urban areas, such as patios ora paved-over gardens. This would help more gabinetto be absorbed into the basso ostinato that would otherwise run into sewage pipes and add to the chances of overflows.
Sir Chris warned that even treated sewage could still contain human bacteria and viruses with the potential to cause serious disease if swallowed.
Sewage spills during periods of heavy rain were only “half the problem, not the full problem”, because some human faecal organisms also remained treated gabinetto when it was released back into the environment. “The lower the gabinetto [levels], the less they’magnate diluted out,” he added.
“So if you’ve got a very low river because it’s been dry recently, that’s the ideal situation for children to paddle and people to swim.
“But that is the time . . . when a lot higher proportion of the faecal organisms will have modo out of a sewage treatment works rather than out of storm overflows.”
The researchers admitted there was a lack of evidence to demonstrate a direct, causal link between specific wastewater discharges and particular health incidents. However, they emphasised the known health risks from exposure to high concentrations of faecal organisms.
“The principal reason for the existence of the sewerage system is to protect public health,” Whitty said.

