I Explored UK's Most Polluted River & it's utterly disgusting

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Leave Curious

Leave Curious

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 1 300
@Tashio240
@Tashio240 10 ай бұрын
Our politicians should be ashamed for allowing this to happen.
@Blaqjaqshellaq
@Blaqjaqshellaq 10 ай бұрын
1. Blame Margaret Thatcher for privatizing the water system. (Privatization for the sake of privatization!) 2. Blame Tony Blair (and his predecessors Neil Kinnock and John Smith) for insisting the problems could be solved through better regulation. What it comes down to, is that privatization was bad for the people but renationalization would offend the Big People. And guess which group was more important to New Labour?
@edmundblackaddercoc8522
@edmundblackaddercoc8522 10 ай бұрын
I don't think narcissists are capable of that emotion.
@WhichDoctor1
@WhichDoctor1 10 ай бұрын
Also blame our current Tory government for slashing regulations and monitoring ass soon as we left the EU and there were no longer EU rules telling them what minimum standards they needed to follow. That’s why this has suddenly become so much bigger of an issue in the last couple of years. This is what taking back control always meant
@MkVenner1975
@MkVenner1975 10 ай бұрын
@@Blaqjaqshellaqit’s not that easy, these companies were bought and the new owners put them up to their eyeballs in debt. There is no way that the taxpayer should take on that debt. Regulate, fine them, when they fail then take them into pubic ownership.
@rapturas
@rapturas 10 ай бұрын
They dont know what shame is!!
@Gamer-Rex
@Gamer-Rex 10 ай бұрын
These sewage companies should honestly rot in prison for what they are doing
@snowstrobe
@snowstrobe 10 ай бұрын
They're just doing what their remit is to do... the government has allowed this to happen.
@Gamer-Rex
@Gamer-Rex 10 ай бұрын
@@snowstrobe I heard it was because of Boris Johnson
@KiLLKiNDLY
@KiLLKiNDLY 10 ай бұрын
It's the UK gov that has allowed this to happen. In Canada dumping raw sewage within 3 miles of Canada's shores is strictly banned.
@Husnain237
@Husnain237 10 ай бұрын
Ofwat, the regulatory body in charge of this stuff needs to be given actual power, and soon as the contracts run out, it needs to be re-nationalised, privatisation of utilities, particularly when there's no competition is far too easy to exploit
@buckodonnghaile4309
@buckodonnghaile4309 10 ай бұрын
​@@KiLLKiNDLYboth Montreal and Victoria dump their raw sewage straight into the water no?
@Solstice261
@Solstice261 10 ай бұрын
It's disgusting that the citizens currently have to pay to keep water companies alive and for the dividends of a bunch of higher ups, great video
@yellowgreen5229
@yellowgreen5229 10 ай бұрын
They chose to, they don't HAVE TO. #TakeBackStolenAssets Water infrastructure is geographically FIXED they can't take it abroad!
@philhawley1219
@philhawley1219 10 ай бұрын
I have recently written to Severn Trent water and told them I am not paying my bill until they stop discharging sewage into the rivers. They have not replied. I urge everyone to do the same.
@KenwayJoel
@KenwayJoel 9 ай бұрын
So what happens when they take you to court for non payment, you think the broken court system in this shithole of a country will back your play? This kind of protest through non payment is moronic, because it doesn't hurt the company in any way shape or form, all it will do is negatively affect you and any other moron who thinks this is a good idea. @@philhawley1219
@stig1989.
@stig1989. 9 ай бұрын
@@philhawley1219 yea do not do this. unless you want to go to court and have your water turned off
@james-5560
@james-5560 9 ай бұрын
@@philhawley1219 So you want them to invest billions in the infrastucture but not pay your bill and have fresh drinking water. The tiktok generation makes me laugh.
@peterhalstead7682
@peterhalstead7682 10 ай бұрын
I am a cold water swimmer in Lancashire. I have to drive 2 hours, high in the middle of nowhere to find clean water. It feels so sacred when you reach it. I wouldn't wash my arse in most of the water in the UK! Truly shocking.🐠
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
Yea, it’s not something I’ve done a great deal of in recent years, for obvious reasons. Good on you for doing. The benefits are lovely when you can.
@freddiemedley5580
@freddiemedley5580 9 ай бұрын
You really do all that? I'm a playboatter who kayaks at the Nottz white water center all the time and it's a badge of honor for us to get illnesses from the river, especially if your lucky enough to get a new disease that no one's had before.
@magneticnorth6917
@magneticnorth6917 9 ай бұрын
as long as you treat yourselves at home and don't put pressure on the NHS, swimming in toxic water is your choice and so are the consequences. can't see how it is a badge of honour though, what if one of you dies?@@freddiemedley5580
@Traveler13
@Traveler13 10 ай бұрын
So glad someone has done dive into this, in the 60s when I was a kid you could not swim or fish in the local waters, in the 70s we started clearing them up, due to joining Europe I guess, When it was announced that Boris was allowing the water companies to pump raw sewage through to our rivers, increasing the problem, thank for doing this it need putting out there
@stevenhibberd4162
@stevenhibberd4162 10 ай бұрын
Yes our goverment has sold everything. Take it back. If I can't do my job I'd be sacked. So who over-sees these private companies in in our country that we pay for every week.
@someblokecalleddave1
@someblokecalleddave1 10 ай бұрын
Similar, as a kid in the 1960's my Dad used to tell us stories about how bad the River Thames had been in the 1950's in terms of pollution - if you fell in, you basically needed to spend to some time in hospital being checked in the event that you fell ill. Later in the early 80's my mates and I all used to swim in the Thames (Tilbury, Essex) with no adverse effects, yeah it was dirty and oily still, but not so bad that you'd find yourself ill. I went away to Uni for a few years at the end of 80's and came back in 93 and found all along the Thames at the places we used to swim, signs telling you not to swim in the river because of pollution. Over those following years I can only guess it's got worse. I think the nail in the coffin came with Brexit, one of the agendas there, was the "Red tape" agenda... The EU imposes too many regulations and over-sight on things that 'We' need to take control of and end the 'Nannying'. One of which was clearly water quality and the EU restrictions on effluent control/farm run-off/building controls relating to the proximity of industrial and residential developments etc. All of which were obviously stymying their potential to cut costs and maximise profit margins and their share value. Unbelievable that people voted for it, but given the recent news relating to the studies showing that the 'Leave' voters were by far lacking in cognitive abilities I guess explains that?
@Traveler13
@Traveler13 10 ай бұрын
@@someblokecalleddave1 yes, Brexit, one of the agendas there, was the "Red tape" agenda spot on, the majority of people it was racist vote I think, it needs sorting out👍
@Traveler13
@Traveler13 10 ай бұрын
@@stevenhibberd4162 well said
@guzford
@guzford 10 ай бұрын
@@someblokecalleddave1 literally nothing changed in the water Industry since Brexit, if anything consents have been tightened, and continue to be tightened, but don't let that affect your fantasy........do you want a tissue?
@elizabethb8789
@elizabethb8789 10 ай бұрын
So outrageous… privatization of services seems to lead to this way too frequently. It’s absolutely criminal what companies are allowed to get away with these days.
@pincermovement72
@pincermovement72 9 ай бұрын
But the politicians get a sweet backhander.
@bhvillaman4401
@bhvillaman4401 9 ай бұрын
​@@pincermovement72I'll give them a backhand if they want it 😂
@thewr0ngchild
@thewr0ngchild 9 ай бұрын
Don't forget the politicians. It's these guys who allow water companies to behave like this. There shouldn't be any water companies, water belongs to all of us and should be a public service, paid for by the public and provided by the public sector.
@quillo2747
@quillo2747 8 ай бұрын
The water companies invest far more money now than they ever did under state management. Leakage for example is a fraction today of what it used to be under the state. But all investments are still dictated by the government, they set the policy, they approve and fund the projects. The water companies make money through investing in the infrastructure, not customer bills, they would make even more if they invested more but the government won't let them.
@Nick_80599
@Nick_80599 4 ай бұрын
​@quillo2747 This is what I've been saying for some time, also the Scottish water system is also discharging sewage yet the SNP have been denying it even though there is evidence of it. Another thing is that when sewers are blocked with things that shouldn't be put down them, they will overflow into the relief system and enter the waterways, consumers need to take some responsibility as well.
@gabrielholland8424
@gabrielholland8424 10 ай бұрын
THANK YOU FOR SHARING, ITS SO IMPORTANT! I am currently doing a study into river pollution for an EPQ qualification, and everything I have been finding has been completely shocking
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
Yeah I knew it was bad, but researching for this video really opened my eyes to how bad it really is.
@rickh3714
@rickh3714 10 ай бұрын
Leave Furious? In NZ it's the invasive Monterey Pine forestry slash runoff and some ' intensive stocking' agriculturalists within the Dairy industry destroying our waters and drainage. Near continual rain/ 'atmospheric rivers' at times in some parts this year sending clays & soil silt down from Cyclone Gabrielle damaged or Native bush & scrub denuded hills etc. Some younger farmers are realizing the issues an earlier generation created but water privatization will probably be on the agenda again with new Medium Right/ Far Right Govt tripartite coalition.
@Asparagusfern52
@Asparagusfern52 10 ай бұрын
I recently finished a presentation on microplastic impacts ecological impacts, and one of the terrifying things I read from academic papers is that nanoplastics are in our blood. Another paper I read also indicated how nanoplastics had the capacity to enter algal cells due to their size and attach to the cellulose to block light. That's not even mentioning how most microplastics contain additives from their manufacturing or pick them up from the environment, such as Kairomone (a hormone) and can desorb these additives into the organisms that consumed them, causing physiological defects in the organisms that do survive. Yet, plastic production and subsequent degradation will continue for many years. It's a horror show to contemplate these occur in our freshwater bodies.
@OscarOSullivan
@OscarOSullivan 9 ай бұрын
@@LeaveCuriousI think it is a lot better in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland
@thewr0ngchild
@thewr0ngchild 9 ай бұрын
Well done for your studies. Most people haven't got a clue, they don't think beyond the tap. It is shocking. I watched David Attenborough talking about this, and the same things Leave Curious mentions in this video. It's an emergency, water and air pollution needs to be treated like a major public health emergency, not swept under the rug like it has been for so many years. There are some small things we can all do to help, like making sure we dispose of our waste correctly so it doesn't enter water to begin with. Don't flush wet wipes, fats or sanitary products down the toilet or the drains. Plastics are responsible for huge damage to our rivers and oceans, so we can make sure we dispose of plastics and oils correctly and recycle as much as we can. Our vote is our biggest weapon. I will only be voting for parties that put the planet first. End of.
@carolinewiggins2803
@carolinewiggins2803 10 ай бұрын
As soon as you get shareholders, the whole aim of any entity is to make them as much money as possible. Nothing else matters, which is one reason why the environment everywhere has been plundered, despoiled and destroyed. Seeing those poor ducks there made me think of what Isabella Tree said in Wilding, when species were found at Knepp flourishing in restored habitats which we didn't think were their normal preferred ones. She said that the environment was so degraded by humans that wildlife was having to make do because there was nothing else. These ducks are having to make do with the crap water quality because there is nothing else. I often see herons and egrets here in Japan in dirty water channels with plastic litter in and it's heartbreaking that they have had to adapt to such crap conditions to survive. What happens to all that plastic litter? Is it caught in contraptions further down the river? And what kind of moron puts nappies down the toilet?? The general public is also responsible. Plastic objects including sanitary products should not be disposed of down the toilet. How about a national campaign for that to start with?
@david2057
@david2057 10 ай бұрын
As someone from a post communistic country, I don't agree with you. The government is much worse
@YujiUedaFan
@YujiUedaFan 10 ай бұрын
How about instruction videos on where to put used nappies? I used to work at a farm and visitors kept on putting used nappies in the recycling bin! How stupid do you have to be?!
@carolinewiggins2803
@carolinewiggins2803 10 ай бұрын
@@david2057 Then I don't know what the answer is...
@ConnorDaly-n7c
@ConnorDaly-n7c 9 ай бұрын
you don't get anywhere by focusing on the people and restricting them even more. you focus on the company CEO's, shareholders, high-ranking government officials, bankers, etc.
@fookorf
@fookorf 9 ай бұрын
@@david2057 who mentioned communism you tit? Having water companies publicly owned is not communism. Regardless, your opinion is based on your own anecdotes and isn't a reliable measuring stick.
@Zapple12
@Zapple12 10 ай бұрын
Your content deserves to be viewed in schools nationwide. Our young people need to know this.... Bravo!
@angry_tortieshell
@angry_tortieshell 10 ай бұрын
Thanks for, as always, raising awareness on this topic. Makes me so angry seeing what the water companies are doing.😡
@thewr0ngchild
@thewr0ngchild 9 ай бұрын
And the politicians who allow and encourage them to do this. It's the politicians who could take direct action to solve this issue if they chose. Instead they wasted MILLIONS of pounds of your money on the HS2 disaster. All the money wasted on that could have gone into improving existing rail services AND upgrading old sewage treatment facilities and building new ones in areas where the older ones are not coping.
@LibertarianGalt
@LibertarianGalt 10 ай бұрын
British Government will tax people to drive in the outskirts of London but won't tax companies dumping in rivers. 10/10.
@davekershaw3695
@davekershaw3695 10 ай бұрын
Thank goodness people are alerting the public to this! I live in Johannesburg and believe me we have the same problems down here. The biggest issue is with industrial effluent which is entering the river systems at the city’s altitude of 5000 feet above sea level and therefore everything downstream, including the prime agricultural areas around the city, are heavily polluted with phosphates and nitrates, in addition to raw sewage from the overpopulated city.
@Solstice261
@Solstice261 10 ай бұрын
Phosphates and nitrates tend to come from agricultural run- off are you sure industrial effluent is the only cause?
@davekershaw3695
@davekershaw3695 10 ай бұрын
There’s an element of agricultural runoff but primarily it’s the city’s industry and human activity that are the main contributors.
@Solstice261
@Solstice261 10 ай бұрын
@@davekershaw3695 ok, hopefully you can close the industry and place proper measures to at the very least filter the runoff, though it's weird that an industrial facility is allowed to expel waste like that, most countries have very strict regulations about that
@davekershaw3695
@davekershaw3695 10 ай бұрын
Unfortunately the country’s water supply, treatment and sewage is a nationalised entity. There’s apparently limited funding for ‘essential’ maintenance and the system is severely constrained. Action groups are largely self governed and have limited impact.
@chasepirtle8662
@chasepirtle8662 10 ай бұрын
Well said sir. Kudos for creating public awareness on this.
@jabber67
@jabber67 9 ай бұрын
He's not your friend
@chasepirtle8662
@chasepirtle8662 9 ай бұрын
Correct, never met the man. Enjoy and highly respect the video content that is produced.
@bensear
@bensear 10 ай бұрын
Nationalised water can't come soon enough! The private sector will never be motivated to act in the interests of the general population or the natural world
@97SEMTEX
@97SEMTEX 10 ай бұрын
Kier Starmer has ruled out the nationisation of any service under his premiership. I won't come soon enough.
@auldfouter8661
@auldfouter8661 10 ай бұрын
The water industry was never privatised in Scotland - and Scottish Water as it is called spills sewage all the time too. The water ain't cheap either.
@scottmills7337
@scottmills7337 10 ай бұрын
Nationalizing water wouldn’t solve the issue. Look at the NHS, wealth stripped from public to private entities.
@YujiUedaFan
@YujiUedaFan 10 ай бұрын
The private sector are literally the sloths of the business world. Why should they do anything of value if they can just rig everything in their favour by doing nothing.
@RB-87
@RB-87 9 ай бұрын
The govenment couldn't afford to buy all the water companies back to re-nationalise the industry
@KateVeeoh
@KateVeeoh 10 ай бұрын
Absolutely shocking 😢 here in Belgium we unfortunately have plenty of environmental struggles as well, but the thought of not even separating sewage from rainwater is bonkers. Over the past 30, 40 years they've really improved on that here. Only 9283045 other issues to tackle haha 😅
@russellpengilley5924
@russellpengilley5924 10 ай бұрын
The combination sewage system is a bit of a weird one. At a building and street level they are separate and (mostly!) continue to be separate. (I.e. the road drainage system doesn't just have poo floating down it). The mixing is from building roof and exterior channel drainage in buildings typically over 50 years old. For housing that could be 60+% of the stock, commercial buildings will be a much lower proportion. The difficult question on who should retrofit privately owned buildings, particularly houses, with separate connections or soakaways means it's unlikely to be resolved at that level. I believe that in Belgium, like most of Europe, you also have a similar legacy combined sewage system, KZbin removes comments with external links, but a quick Google for 'Belgium combined sewers' or 'Belgium sewer discharge' found sources and groups trying to reduce the number of discharge days into a Brussels canal. The fact that most countries experience this problem with a wide variety of water company ownership structures suggests to me this problem is likely a mix of an increase in extreme rainfall events and the difficulty in spending money to increase infrastructure capacity to cope with the 1% event when it does fine 99% of the time.
@KateVeeoh
@KateVeeoh 10 ай бұрын
@@russellpengilley5924 yeah absolutely, goes for us here as well. It's massively improved over the last decades, but there is still a lot of work that needs to be done. Still is bonkers that it's not a given to separate sewage and rainwater, the underinvestment in the water management industry is a fact. The river Zenne (a river that goes through Brussels) was known as "the open sewer" in the 90s still, and it had the absolute stink of sewage coming off it. It falls mostly to private persons to cough up the cost of separating rainwater from sewage water when renovating houses, but a lot of councils will incentivise private persons to do so. It's the absolute volume of sewage draining into rivers and seas in the UK that gets me. It also happens over here, but I feel it has improved a lot more in the last decades.
@foobar9220
@foobar9220 10 ай бұрын
Where I live (rural Southern Germany) there combined system is replaced by a separated system when a street and its underlying infrastructure need to be redeveloped. Retrofitting individual buildings is relatively easy by just disconnecting rain pipes from the existing system and digging a new trench (of course that might involve opening and repaving your driveway) to the rain water sewers
@KateVeeoh
@KateVeeoh 10 ай бұрын
@@foobar9220 same here for newbuild/renovated homes, offices, roads...it's become law to do so; as we has 400k houses not connected to sewage systems not too long ago...Flanders is undertaking 183 sewage system renewal projects as we'd been lagging behind. But the issue now is not as much the sewage systems (lots of work done over the decades) but the agricultural and industrial run off/waste water dumping. Hopefully they'll tackle that soon, too.
@russellpengilley5924
@russellpengilley5924 10 ай бұрын
@@KateVeeoh the video was a bit misleading that nothing has been done over time period to improve separation. A bit of Googling shows that in recent years Brussels has ~10m cubic metres of discharge per year and Thames Water who cover central London and some suburbs discharge ~40m cubic metres per year. Adjust for population (Thames Water has ~9m customers) and it's broadly similar. It's not surprising really that it's so similar, most of Europe planned their sewage systems at the end of the 1800's and shared experiences and designs with each other. Since then we've had similar population growth, similar weather pattern changes and similar regulation. We probably use the same engineering consultancies to provide the upgrade designs too! I think the public are getting closer to agreeing that we need to pay for either massive catchment tanks, or full infrastructure separation, but it's coming in at £200bn+ or £7000 per household. Which is simultaneously cheap as a one-off cost to solve a big environmental problem, but expensive at an individual level even if you spread it over 10 years.
@izzykusnoneofyourbuissnes3238
@izzykusnoneofyourbuissnes3238 10 ай бұрын
I am honestly speechless. You're doing some amazing work, I hope there will be consequenses for those assholes
@MrCazjd
@MrCazjd 10 ай бұрын
They’ve been getting away with it for years and all the factories that dump chemical waste into rivers. They’re given poxy fines which do nothing to stop it.
@johnners911
@johnners911 10 ай бұрын
As Sunak has just appointed the husband of an Anglian Water executive as our Environment Secretary, the only consequences look set to be higher profits, higher bills and more sewage in our rivers.
@LoneSheWolf09
@LoneSheWolf09 9 ай бұрын
Unfortunately not 😔
@bwghall1
@bwghall1 9 ай бұрын
It`s what comes out of their assholes I am worried about.
@davidraffe3445
@davidraffe3445 10 ай бұрын
The UK's combined sewers are a relic of the Victorian era which underscores the lack of investment, not just by the private companies who have been there since the 1990s, but also the public ones that preceded them. Honestly, i am not certain that renationalisation in the current British political scene would be any better. Private companies are about maximising profit - we all know. These particular companies however, are supposed to be tightly regulated to avoid this lack of investment. I think the real issue lies with a dysfunctional regulator.
@damonroberts7372
@damonroberts7372 10 ай бұрын
I thought the same. You've got to ask, what even happened to the proceeds of the privatisation of these utilities in the first place? It's _that_ revenue that should've been invested into capital works... waiting for private enterprise to do it for you seems weird.
@davidraffe3445
@davidraffe3445 10 ай бұрын
I'm not sure, but I do know that in the late 90s and early 2000s there was a lot of money being spent to improved infrastructure including preventing storm spills into rivers. I know this because I was working for contractors and consultants in the industry. The work was required to comply with EU legislation - I think it was called the water framework directive. It would be interesting to understand more about when the water quality in rivers declined again.
@3chords490
@3chords490 3 ай бұрын
The problem goes deeper.As a nation we are woeful at investing in our infrastructure. and planning long term. We prefer to keep our money rather than pay the taxes needed……and privatisation was an attempt to pretend that we were doing something when we weren’t .
@bencollyer2296
@bencollyer2296 10 ай бұрын
Fooking disgusting The government should be ashamed for letting this happen
@Solstice261
@Solstice261 10 ай бұрын
Knowing their recent behaviour, I wouldn't put it pass them to turn it into a wedge issue
@Alex-cw3rz
@Alex-cw3rz 10 ай бұрын
This government has no shame
@spikefawkes5152
@spikefawkes5152 9 ай бұрын
Their tories. They don’t know what shame is,or empathy, or sincerity, or compassion, or love, or poverty. I’m sure I’ve missed a few out.
@JOHNTHEWHISK
@JOHNTHEWHISK 4 ай бұрын
Look at what the rich have done
@kendavies945
@kendavies945 Ай бұрын
This is entirely the fault of the British people for allowing it to happen.
@emmeboi
@emmeboi 10 ай бұрын
Thx for sharing.
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
ah thank you very much 🙂
@bettyswallocks6411
@bettyswallocks6411 10 ай бұрын
Not only have the water companies paid out £70 billion on dividends, but they also _borrowed_ £70 billion over the same time, essentially borrowing money to fund shareholder dividends, which is _supposed_ to be illegal. I would love to know why successive UK governments have seen fit to allow the water companies to operate in this manner.
@absta100
@absta100 9 ай бұрын
because they are C U * T S. great comment
@charlethemagne5466
@charlethemagne5466 8 ай бұрын
@@7HUNDERGOD-fx5ct yes its the government but don't act like the Tory party had nothing to do with it. They been in power for 20 years and nothing has gotten better, only worse. Conservatives and austerity go together like piss and shit.
@quillo2747
@quillo2747 8 ай бұрын
Water companies don't make money from customer bills. They make money from planning, building and maintaining infrastructure. Its the government that approves and funds that infrastructure. Its the government that has been underfunding, the government controls the money and what gets built. Anything extra, usually short term reactive work, has to be taken on debt. Yorkshire Water alone are spending 8 billion on infrastructure in the next 5 years. Your 70 billion nationaly since privatisation wouldn't go far.
@bettyswallocks6411
@bettyswallocks6411 8 ай бұрын
@@quillo2747 UK water companies spend an average of 28% of the money that get from customers on debt servicing. The remainder of your post is barely worth dissecting, except to say that the water companies are privatised. They were privatised by the tories in order to “make them more competitive” and to reduce the burden of the once publicly-owned on the public purse (taxpayer). i.e. They are privatised, shareholder-owned companies. Unless you are happy for taxpayer money top go straight to the pockets of water company shareholders, they should never be in receipt of any kind of government subsidy.
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
Heres just a few organisations that are working against this problem, I'm sure theres many more, so please share! www.sas.org.uk/ theriverstrust.org/ facebook.com/BeneathBritishWaters/
@eidolonomega
@eidolonomega 10 ай бұрын
We own it, is another organisation trying to tackle this. Along with other problematic privatised public works.
@bartholomewdicaterina2039
@bartholomewdicaterina2039 10 ай бұрын
It's similar thing over here in Australia 🤮, thank you for raising and bring this to the community and our attention.! Keep up the good work. 🙂👍
@damonroberts7372
@damonroberts7372 10 ай бұрын
Not so much. Sydney's pipelines of raw sewage into the deep ocean off Malabar, North Head and Bondi, are the last vestige of the "bad old days". Melbourne releases tertiary treated Class A+ water that could be used for irrigation, or returned to catchments for eventual recycling into potable water (if people weren't squeamish about it). Local government authorities investigate illegal stormwater connections to the sanitary sewer, and property owners are issued notices to rectify the situation. Failure to comply results in a fine, and the local authority can order the work be done by a licensed plumber at your cost.
@ruthmckay9086
@ruthmckay9086 2 ай бұрын
​@@damonroberts7372I don't know about raw sewage, but if I remember correctly, agricultural run-off and industrial effluent are slowly but surely killing off the Great Barrier Reef. Just another example of humans' habitat destruction.
@damonroberts7372
@damonroberts7372 2 ай бұрын
@@ruthmckay9086 That's true for inshore areas close to human settlement at least; bearing in mind that the Great Barrier Reef is one of the largest contiguous biomes on the planet, most of it in the open ocean. But I've learned to my dismay that almost as soon as you open your mouth something comes along to contradict you, and I just recently saw in the news that the equivalent of over 180 Olympic-sized swimming pools of raw sewage has spilled into the Albert River (Gold Coast region, Queensland) from decrepit infrastructure. _Sigh_
@latheofheaven1017
@latheofheaven1017 10 ай бұрын
35 years the private water industry has had to show that privatisation is best for the country. But of course, it's shown the opposite. Of course, it has! A company's first priority is making profits for its shareholders. If it can't do that, the shareholders take their money elsewhere. Then the company doesn't have money to exist; end of story for the company. So let's not do that anymore. Some things need to be done for the good of the country.
@quillo2747
@quillo2747 8 ай бұрын
The water companies invest far more money now than they ever did under state management. Leakage for example is a fraction today of what it used to be under the state. But all investments are still dictated by the government, they set the policy, they approve and fund the projects. The water companies make money through investing in the infrastructure, not customer bills, they would make even more if they invested more but the government won't let them. Due to the public outrage investment has doubled this investment cycle, Yorkshire alone are spending about 8 billion on infrastructure over the next 5 years and most of that is on the waste side. The main reason the waste system cant cope is massive population rise from mass immigration. An extra 20 million peoples turds every day compared to a few decades ago.
@olgacvetkova114
@olgacvetkova114 10 ай бұрын
What a shame! Thanks for raising this issue! Water companies should be placed under strict public control and be inspected regularly with inspection results officially published and necessary measures taken immediately!
@IfEnjoinder
@IfEnjoinder 10 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for all your hard work!
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
Its what I'm here to do, thank you for the support!
@willieclark2256
@willieclark2256 10 ай бұрын
I like that you’re highlighting the issues facing ecosystem health as well as the projects reversing the damage. It’s a good balance.
@alexandermathie66
@alexandermathie66 10 ай бұрын
I live by the river Almond up here in Livingston, Scotland and for the last five years it's been howling. Work has been done but you can see the signs of raw sewerage everywhere. I just hope we can turn things around in the near future. Corruption seems to be everywhere.
@plottwist1733
@plottwist1733 10 ай бұрын
I live near the river Aire in West Yorkshire and it reeks of raw sewerage every time it rains. Yorkshire Water are as scummy as the stuff they release into the rivers.
@alexandermathie66
@alexandermathie66 10 ай бұрын
@@plottwist1733 What we have here is a bunch of corporations with zero authority telling us they have all the authority. Fascism in full flow. Exactly why our parents and grandparents went to war! Our government Isn't ours anymore. Conglomerate puppets who have fell into this global agenda. It was plain to see in '20 when they just acted like salesmen for a large pharmaceutical company. Disgraceful
@Ghost-Mama
@Ghost-Mama 10 ай бұрын
That’s so terrible. Human GREED is so terrible 😢.
@JOHNTHEWHISK
@JOHNTHEWHISK 4 ай бұрын
It should be made a crime to be so greedy
@Ghost-Mama
@Ghost-Mama 4 ай бұрын
@@JOHNTHEWHISK if they had any instilled values, standards or morals they wouldn’t have let themselves become monsters 👺 and demons 🤡. There are plenty of rich people who do wonderful Philosophy work by helping society to set each other up for success…. And then there are those who don’t have any instilled integrity and they disappoint everyone by being greedy, selfish, nasty 🤮 monsters 👺 and demons 🤡.
@laurelcaldwell7804
@laurelcaldwell7804 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for the video. I do not live in the UK, but recognize that this is a serious problem that must be addressed.
@Prongsie1999
@Prongsie1999 10 ай бұрын
I live near Folkestone/Dover and fairly regularly cannot swim of kayak in my local sea because the water is so regularly polluted. Its kind of depressing actually. I grew up here near the sea and love the water but cannot access it because water companies keep releasing sewage into it. Its an outrage
@PaIaeoCIive1648
@PaIaeoCIive1648 10 ай бұрын
Hey, Prongsie. Lived in Folkestone for years and the surfers told me they often got stomach bugs after being in the sea off the sandy beach. There's a sewage outlet just off the coast at the Leas pouring out literal crap. When I went fossiling at the cliffs there I could sometimes smell the tide coming in as well as hear it. If it's like this for people imagine what it does to the marine life.
@OllieTattersall
@OllieTattersall 9 ай бұрын
Same here in Thanet. We've had a number of unscreened spills in to the sea resulting in prohibitions from entering the sea or even the high tide point on the beach. It happened once during summer and people were allowed in the sea for close to two weeks. Aside from the obvious environmental damage it was detrimental to local businesses who rely on summer income.
@guystrong7218
@guystrong7218 10 ай бұрын
Feargal Sharkey, from the undertones, has been doing great work on this and there is a book called The Last Drop by Tim Smedley which is great about water - with certain mindblowing sections on the UK
@carolinebennett5615
@carolinebennett5615 10 ай бұрын
Blame the water companies, yes, but who allows them to operate like this? The government.
@johnners911
@johnners911 10 ай бұрын
Sunak has just appointed the husband of an Anglian Water executive as our Environment Secretary
@ConnorDaly-n7c
@ConnorDaly-n7c 9 ай бұрын
and why is the government so corrupt? who is the government indebted to? simple questions with powerful answers
@johnners911
@johnners911 9 ай бұрын
@@ConnorDaly-n7c They're so corrupt because that's how they were brought up.
@ekay4495
@ekay4495 9 ай бұрын
The answer is the Tory's, the rich and the upper class @@ConnorDaly-n7c
@JulietCrowson
@JulietCrowson 9 ай бұрын
A while ago a judge decided that a company do anything for profit it decides to do in order to save the company from failing (losing money) We need to overturn that judge's judgement. 🕊️✝️
@richardjohnson5529
@richardjohnson5529 10 ай бұрын
The tories get donations from water companies plus the environment minister is married to the head of anglian water. so until the tories are kicked out then this will carry on.
@joinedupjon
@joinedupjon 10 ай бұрын
Pre privatisation water companies used to run public tours of their waste water treatment works (sewage works) so people could have what was going on there explained to them, I guess it was seen as part of being accountable when they were publicly owned - I went on one of these tours back in the day (infrastructure geek). haven't seen any similar tours taking place recently... makes you wonder if the companies aren't proud about what they're doing there anymore.
@johnredfern1973
@johnredfern1973 9 ай бұрын
They still do
@joinedupjon
@joinedupjon 9 ай бұрын
@@johnredfern1973 Cant find any near me - and I used to be able to. Can see tours of disused Bazalgette era pumping stations in London but I don't think that counts, though I'm sure it's still interesting.
@charlethemagne5466
@charlethemagne5466 8 ай бұрын
​@@johnredfern1973 lol that's an outright lie, none of the water companies do this in the west midlands or north of london.
@patrickr2790
@patrickr2790 10 ай бұрын
Excellent video. It’s heartbreaking. It would be great if everyone engaged with politics, their MPs, local councillors to try and get this changed
@whitetroutchannel
@whitetroutchannel 10 ай бұрын
its getting people to understand that civic duty is more than a comment on facebook, people put up with shit in streams but cancel strickly and theres a national out cry, the politicans have everyone so down trodden that theyll just take it these days
@simonbarrow479
@simonbarrow479 10 ай бұрын
The regulator is powerless because of a lack of investment in the Environment Agency by the Tory governments. Time they went. But companies are companies and they need tightly regulating. Well done Rob for highlighting the issue.
@johnners911
@johnners911 10 ай бұрын
Sunak has also just appointed the husband of an Anglian Water executive as our Environment Secretary
@simonbarrow479
@simonbarrow479 10 ай бұрын
@@johnners911 it goes from bad to worse. Can’t wait for Sunak to go
@laura6874
@laura6874 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for the video, just found your channel yesterday and I am learning so much!
@RetroPaolo
@RetroPaolo 10 ай бұрын
This whole situation is disgraceful. What's even worse is that upon looking into the political side of this, I found the following: Labour put forward a bill to hold these water companies to account, but it was rejected by our Tory MP's. Upon further research in my area, I found that my local MP voted against this and has shares in Southern Water. Conflict of interest? We need to ensure that we never let the Conservatives into power ever again.
@jacks2222
@jacks2222 10 ай бұрын
Amen!!
@YujiUedaFan
@YujiUedaFan 10 ай бұрын
Despite all this the sewerage charge is still the most expensive in Devon/Cornwall.
@bhvillaman4401
@bhvillaman4401 9 ай бұрын
Well I guess we know which party privatised the waterways in the first place (thatcher). Just another way of trying to keep the rich richer and killing the poor quicker 😂
@ekay4495
@ekay4495 9 ай бұрын
Tory party is nothing but conflict of interest, they're opening robbing the UK blind cause they know they dipshit supporters will eat up any excuse
@naomisherred166
@naomisherred166 9 ай бұрын
Pretty much everything they privatised they have shares in - I hope all this makes so-called conservatives go away - they should be called the destruction party
@RB-87
@RB-87 9 ай бұрын
It's essentially impossible to re-nationalise the water industry, the govenment couldn't afford to buy all the companies back.
@BeneathBritishWaters
@BeneathBritishWaters 9 ай бұрын
Sorry i could not be with you on the day but pleased my footage was of use to you. Very good video Rob and thanks for highlighting as issue i have been working on for over 15 years.
@rridderbusch518
@rridderbusch518 10 ай бұрын
Doesn't the UK have an *Environmental Protection Agency* ??? Even in Flint, Michigan water has been remediated, and is drinkable (unless one still has lead pipes.). Thanks for all of your work!
@billbhein2949
@billbhein2949 10 ай бұрын
Unfortunately corrupt governments like to sell every publicly own owned enterprise in the name of privatisation for a short term windfall. Then wash their hands of it when shit hits the fans.. Politicians, the lowest in the bottom feeder ranking..
@johnners911
@johnners911 10 ай бұрын
Sunak has just appointed the husband of an Anglian Water executive as our Environment Secretary. Go figure.
@quillo2747
@quillo2747 8 ай бұрын
A comparison to Flint doesn't really work. All UK tap water is drinkable, its some of the cleanest tao water in the world. Its also not pumped full of fluoride unlike a lot of US water.
@louislamonte334
@louislamonte334 10 ай бұрын
I sure hope that this once-beautiful and healthy river is cleaned up one day! It's an incredible tragedy, disgrace and deep shame on England that the river is in the current shape it's in!
@Alex-cw3rz
@Alex-cw3rz 10 ай бұрын
This is just disgraceful this government does not give one about this country they are more interested in what they can take from it.
@snowstrobe
@snowstrobe 10 ай бұрын
Never vote for a political party that doesn't have a commitment to renationalising - and that actually includes Labour now.
@rjung_ch
@rjung_ch 10 ай бұрын
How the UK has been failing nature and it's environment....so very sad. I guess if parliament would care more and work more for the people vs the companies killing and polluting the planet. Keep it up gals and guys. Hope you folks and others keep doing good work and try and fix the mess.
@brimleyhillmassive
@brimleyhillmassive 10 ай бұрын
The local water company slogan: Water For Life. The irony is that our rivers are dead.
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
Yup sounds about right
@brimleyhillmassive
@brimleyhillmassive 10 ай бұрын
@@LeaveCurious YT removed my comment, it was a link to the Australian company that owns Southern water. I wonder why it was repeatedly removed
@TOMas12408
@TOMas12408 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for bringing this to light and inspiring me to be more eco-friendly
@marybradley7791
@marybradley7791 10 ай бұрын
Before privitisation in the 70s and 80s we were making progress with cleaning our rivers and beaches, i remember reports that the river Don near where i live was no longer a dead river and was recovering, we seem to have gone backwards. I think it would be incredibly expensive to re nationalise as we would have to buy back all those peoples shares some of which would be small share holders, and the cost would make it prohibitive what i do think we should do instead is make the laws stronger to insist on investment and punish wrong doings and to make sure those laws are enforced more effectively. The government could also give funding to organisations to mitigate pollution by planting reeds and other plants that help absorb pollution and by restoring eco systems to make them more resilient to pollution. The Yorkshire Wildlife Park has the river Torne running through it and natural wetlands as well, and they have done a great deal to restore the environment by planting reeds and plants in the river and wetlands and trees along the river banks. There is an abundance of natural wildlife to be seen using the area, they have also build a large freshwater lake which attracts yet more wildlife. They have also improved the woodland areas in the park by planting natural plants and putting up bird boxes and bug hotels. They also have a wild meadow area.
@quillo2747
@quillo2747 8 ай бұрын
Water companies invest far more today than ever happened when nationalised. Leakage is 1/10th today what is was when nationalised. The companies make money via building infrastructure, not customer bills. They have an incentive to repair and build new. Its the government that approves and funds those projects, its the government that has underfunded. The government controls and funds what gets built, if the government isn't doing a good job today, why on earth would you think it would be better nationalised. The HS2 disaster is an example of a fully government controlled project. Meanwhile united utilities has tunneled under the lake district for a new aqueduct and spent exactly what they said they would and from start to end it only took a couple of years. HS2 is 5x over budget, a decade delayed and now less than half the original scope.
@KiLLKiNDLY
@KiLLKiNDLY 10 ай бұрын
How is that not illegal in the UK? I'm from Canada and dumping raw sewage like that isn very much strictly banned
@kerryfirehorse
@kerryfirehorse 10 ай бұрын
It is illegal but not being enforced by the government apart from occasional fines which mean nothing to the water companies because their profits are so huge.
@jackking5567
@jackking5567 9 ай бұрын
I'm pleased you've done this video. I'm someone who has highlighted the problems with sewers ever since water was privatised. The lack of investment and lack of care about what is effectively toxic waste tipping into our rivers and seas is evident everywhere. You mention hourly sewer discharge rates - figures gained from water companies own data. What it fails to tell us is how many litres that is. I can help! I monitor local overflows and an average sized one (one metal grate, not 3 like in your video) near me discharges around 1 cubic metre of sewage every 4 seconds. The water companies mention overflowing for hours...
@mr0tom83
@mr0tom83 10 ай бұрын
I would just block those outlets. It would cause outrage, but that's the point.
@mikeoglen6848
@mikeoglen6848 10 ай бұрын
It would flood people's homes....
@PhilLewis-xg7iv
@PhilLewis-xg7iv 10 ай бұрын
Fantastic video my friend, keep up the good work. Just reading the comments here ive realised it's not just a British problem, it a worldwide problem, which to me is absolutely shocking ! We need more people like you. Thank you.
@ivancar555
@ivancar555 9 ай бұрын
Just imagine how much feces and trash 7+ billion humans produce every day.
@sunnyh2334
@sunnyh2334 10 ай бұрын
Hope this goes viral, re-nationalise seems to be the only answer, but def along with some legal punishments
@IanPhillipsWildlife
@IanPhillipsWildlife 10 ай бұрын
Renationalisation would be expensive to the point that I don't see any government, present or future, committing to it. I hope I'm wrong..
@mynewcolour
@mynewcolour 10 ай бұрын
If there was political will to actually enforce the law, the worst offending water companies would go insolvent. The government could then step in to reinstate proper water authorities whose remit was water provision and environmental protection rather than dividends.
@m9017t
@m9017t 9 ай бұрын
@@IanPhillipsWildlifeit doesn’t need to be expensive, these companies are in tons of debt. Politicians were saying “we need to compensate the shareholders if we nationalise!”. Compensate what? They’re up to their eyeballs in debt! They are worthless. They should be forced to cap customer bills and once bankrupt taken by the government with 0 compensation
@OllieTattersall
@OllieTattersall 9 ай бұрын
Agree. Or fine the board executives directly. Fining the company just knocks back on to the consumer.
@mynewcolour
@mynewcolour 9 ай бұрын
@@OllieTattersall I’m no expert but I believe directors can only be prosecuted if they have defrauded the company.
@seajem2
@seajem2 10 ай бұрын
Stop paying their water bills untill they do something about the cleaning things up and stop paying the bloody share holders
@davejenvey3598
@davejenvey3598 8 ай бұрын
People are more scared of their credit scores these days.
@patrickdijkman8974
@patrickdijkman8974 10 ай бұрын
Money grab, grab, grab, grab, grab, grab.
@eric2500
@eric2500 10 ай бұрын
*These companies are not doing what you pay them to do.* Make utilities public again!
@Entoron055
@Entoron055 10 ай бұрын
Love your activism. I am very grateful for you mentioning the failings of privatisation and the lack of public framework and investment. It was a great video in my opinion even though its subject was grim
@jovice9867
@jovice9867 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for this vlog. What a tragic, disgusting, embarrassing and totally avoidable situation to find ourselves in 2023. What are the government and the Environment Agency doing to allow this constant law breaking. The management and directors should be prosecuted and face imprisonment for this and then it would stop overnight .
@youcouldbesohappy
@youcouldbesohappy 10 ай бұрын
Whilst I broadly agree with the content here, I feel its worth mentioning the water companies are facing moving goalposts due to house building constantly increasing the front end loading on the systems. It doesn't help with people switching to artifical grasses and extended drivers which increase surface run off in wet weather, along with increased rain due to climate change. So yes the water companies are the bad guys, but actually everyone in society needs to be conscious of the wider problems too
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
Yeah thats a very good point. Its a very complex issue. But its unforgivable that theres been such little investment since privatisation.
@youcouldbesohappy
@youcouldbesohappy 10 ай бұрын
@LeaveCurious Yes, it's a real shame. Having worked for both government departments and for Welsh Water though, I actually have more faith in the water company changing and improving than I believe taking it under government (incompetent) control would do. Some of the most committed environmentalists I know are now working in the industry and I do feel they are being changed from within and developing strong environmental leaders That said, there is absolutely a historic failure in investment in infrastructure which they are now fighting a losing battle in. For me, the solution would be to issue very highly scrutinised grants to the water companies for those improvements, with a team of eco-warriors to be checking every detail, and ensuring they got delivered and if they didnt, the water company would be forced to be pay. That would likely have a greater chance of delivering the changes we need.
@steveosborne2297
@steveosborne2297 10 ай бұрын
@@youcouldbesohappy whilst I understand many of your points the main reason given for privatisation was that the improvements in infrastructure were too expensive for the government and so private profit-making companies would be able to invest much more . However the opposite appears to be true in most regions
@Solstice261
@Solstice261 10 ай бұрын
While the housing industry is also partly responsible ( that's why the proposal of allowing them to pollute more is so ridiculous) you must bear in mind that most of this pollution comes from raw untreated sewage, this is meant to be an emergency measure during storms to avoid backflow, this companies do it near all the time because it's cheaper than upgrading and maintaining the infrastructure, moving goalposts aren't a problem for them
@youcouldbesohappy
@youcouldbesohappy 10 ай бұрын
Yes, I think we've gone from one group not investing to another group still not investing enough. This does make me wonder what spurred Dwr Cymru into adopting a not-for-profit model in 2001? I worry that a re-nationalism would just result in the whole machine falling to pieces and the industry being pulled from side to side by the Etonites in Whitehall (as with other government owned utilities!) Ultimately I think better leadership, and a focus on "doughnut economics" is needed in the water industry rather than nationalisation but that's just the one opinion.
@karinschild9020
@karinschild9020 10 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for exposing this problem!
@ibeawol4999
@ibeawol4999 10 ай бұрын
I appreciate you even making this video, As an angler ive seen this happening for years aswell as the impact of it, Not enough people speak of it or let it be known...
@benisman
@benisman 8 ай бұрын
You are so right to point out the fundamental flaw of privatisation of essential services. These industries will be put under the control of “tech savvy entrepreneurs” who “stimulate innovation and growth”. When in reality, all they do is gut the service down to the bones, deliver the bare minimum to their customers, and therefore deliver record profits to their shareholders. Like you said, these shareholders often don’t care at all with what actually happens with these services because they don’t have to use them and as long as they see the money flowing into their accounts, they are happy. Meanwhile it’s the taxpayer who has to suffer under the mess that they create, provide the funding for their “innovation”, and eventually bail them out when their unsustainable business practices go bust. It’s cruel and sickening. Love your videos❤
@henrylind9730
@henrylind9730 9 ай бұрын
Great video! Privatisation is absolutely disgusting in every sector of our country
@JeffCreates
@JeffCreates 10 ай бұрын
It certainly won't be a Conversative government that "steps up". I'm honestly not sure, if they were presented with the ability to do so, a labour government would either. I suspect the conversation is short - Government : "we can take the waterways back into public ownership if we significantly raise taxes" Voters : "If you do that, I'll vote for the other people".
@jacks2222
@jacks2222 10 ай бұрын
This is so sickening! When I was a kid my brother and I used to catch crayfish in that river and we regularly ate rainbow trout from it too. Not only poisoning our rivers, coastline and food sources but making us pay for it too.. WTVF??
@moogdome2562
@moogdome2562 10 ай бұрын
Disgusting. Thank you for bringing this to our attention. I thought this kind of thing was outlawed?. Here in Sheffield, we have the river Don, and several other rivers. The Don, has been cleaned up, or so they say, since the steel works closed down. Trout and otters are said to be back. When the steelworks were open, the warmer water, supported some exotic plants and trees, that shouldn't have been there. But, now the steelworks are no more, these plants and trees, are now gone. Everything boils down to greed and money. What is more important than our environment?. No morals, no scruples.. The water companies should have never been privatised. It has caused so many problems in other areas too. The Road to hell song comes to mind. Water is a a natural necessity for, all living things. It is a crime, that we have to pay for it. Water is a gift. The government and authorities do more harm than good. Without our sacred environment, none of us would exist. Thank you for all the good you do.
@benhowlett7693
@benhowlett7693 9 ай бұрын
All them fish passes they put in don and yet they pollute it with shite! Can’t make it up can you! I personally think don is going backwards. Used to often see trout topping but you look now and I know when I’ve looked you don’t see many.
@umairsheikh3744
@umairsheikh3744 9 ай бұрын
Excellent video and coverage. This is a much needed matter of awareness.
@chegeny
@chegeny 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this video. The fate of our rivers and our health should never be in the hands of billionaires who can't be bothered.
@Quadrophiniac
@Quadrophiniac 9 ай бұрын
We had a similar problem with overflow where I live in Canada. Every time it rained, our river would be overwhelmed with sewage cause the old system couldn't handle it anymore. We ended up building a giant underground tank to allow for more storage for the sewage, so it overflows into that, instead of right into the river.
@insAneTunA
@insAneTunA 10 ай бұрын
Here in the Netherlands we have a government controlled sewage treatment, but it is still worthless in terms of pollution. A recent report noted that rivers and small lakes are even polluted worse as it was expected, in many cases it is even dangerous to swim in those waters, but people are oblivious to the danger and they swim in it anyway. A couple of years ago an investigative TV journalist found out that the people from the sewage treatment plant do test for certain substances in the water that has been treated, but their tests only cover a certain amount of substances. They purposely do not test for a certain amount of other very toxic substances. When they were asked about that by the TV journalist why they do not test for all the toxic substances that are possibly still in the water after treatment of the water, the people from the water treatment plant started a circle reasoning that made no sense at all. They said that they do not know that there are other toxic substances in the water after the treatment of the water, and if they do not know that there are still toxic substances in the treated water their conclusion is that they also do not have to test for it. Because they say that they do not know what they do not know. It sounds absurd, and it is absurd, but this was their real answer. It really made the steam coming from my ears. To this date nothing has changed. And the pollution continues. However, we do see a similar thing going on with our electrical grid. It was privatized about a decade ago or so, and now we learn that the capacity from the grid is no longer sufficient enough. And it is so bad that starting new companies were already turned down by the electrical company for their application from their new building to be connected to the grid. The private companies just have not invested anything enough to keep the grid up to modern day specifications. Now they want to let people with solar panels pay more for their connection to the grid, because the electrical companies are blaming the people with solar panels for the capacity issues with the grid. I mean, it is absurd because it was a problem that could have been avoided easily because it was a well known fact to anyone that more and more people are installing solar panels. And that was not something that happened over a single night. But the companies just let it happen, then it becomes a serious national problem, and then the government has to step in, and guess who is going to pay to fix it? That's right, the people. And the shareholders from the companies have a bigger profit because they do not have to pay for the capacity imrpovements.
@insAneTunA
@insAneTunA 10 ай бұрын
Of course a big 👍
@TomCurtis23122012
@TomCurtis23122012 10 ай бұрын
By fixing the fines at a value (that can be budgeted for by cost effective managers under pressure) the UK regulatory system has (accidentally?) legitimised a pay-off scheme for pollution. (The same has been true in all areas of pollution managed by fixed penalties, for years.) For example, the EA were only allowed to fine up to £250k for water offences. Thanks to widespread public support, via petitions and engagement in public consultation, the EA have been granted powers for unlimited fines! Keep up the good work spreading the news of their spreading the poos! 😂❤
@betzyjomay6001
@betzyjomay6001 10 ай бұрын
We ought to do an 'Erin Brockovich' and get the owners to take a dip?? See what their reaction is.....
@robertmacdonald4878
@robertmacdonald4878 10 ай бұрын
Omg. I'm shocked ! ... we in canada ( a much larger country) have delt with this sewer issue in the metropolitan areas to date. I'm not currently up to date on this matter but, I'm shocked that ENGLAND will allow this . Omg. In canada.. the financial penalties towards these companies would force them to seek other options. I wish you luck. No wonder they state to not eat the fresh water fish. Again.. good luck. Respectfully Robert MacDonald Wildlife control service Canada 🇨🇦
@VantaDraws
@VantaDraws 9 ай бұрын
What do they use as an alternative over in Canada?
@ludicer122
@ludicer122 10 ай бұрын
Great video for bringing attention to this!
@AlexnicholasBlakely
@AlexnicholasBlakely 10 ай бұрын
Yea these are tough videos to watch and worse for you to make but you're right, needs to put out there time and time again. It's ultimately the greatest feat of a wildlife conservationist, to spread awareness. Keep it up big dawg ❤
@edgeyt1
@edgeyt1 9 ай бұрын
It's not just rivers - Lake Windermere had raw sewage discharged into it on up to 70 days in 2022 so poisoning one of the uk's most popular tourist destinations and home to a unique fish as well as all the businesses that rely on the reputation of the Lake District.
@zoomanfox6066
@zoomanfox6066 10 ай бұрын
More power to you!!! The more people that see the complete disregard decision makers have on the our living environment the better. You are doing a fantastic job in highlighting issues that really matter to our everyday, the benefits of being surrounded by healthy land, rivers and seas are immense.
@generalpartridge7653
@generalpartridge7653 8 ай бұрын
The same story of privatization here in the UK. Again and again. If the NHS goes, I think I will seriously consider moving...
@samjackson2868
@samjackson2868 10 ай бұрын
The question begs to be asked, although it’s not to defend water companies for pumping other crap into rivers and thus into the sea - who flushes tampons, condom and nappies down the loo? I mean really?
@mikeoglen6848
@mikeoglen6848 10 ай бұрын
The People do it. They are ignorant and lazy...
@Druagr
@Druagr 9 ай бұрын
The thing about companies not investing back into what they do and instead trying to maximise profit for themselves seems to be happening in every industry worldwide now. Scary implications for the future.
@RR-bn5wo
@RR-bn5wo 9 ай бұрын
Cant believe doesnt have a million+ subs, amazing quality. Thank you brother. I work in animal rehabilitation and see a ton of public/government failings also, so its always interesting to see it through other domains also.
@TheDizastarmaster
@TheDizastarmaster 10 ай бұрын
You can see the difference in Scotland where the waterboard is public owned again.
@hadogenes5049
@hadogenes5049 10 ай бұрын
There seems to be this taboo in conservation and nature media when it comes to what should be done, its always full of vague sentiments of 'be more environmentally friendly' and 'we all have to pull together and do something' (looking at you BBC documentaries), very rarely do they blame those in charge and the systems in place for the mess that they have caused. I really like that youre doing these kinds of videos, and blaming privatisation for it, though i think it would be doing a disservice to not mention the torys, at least you could say that water systems were privatised by the tories, we need to start blaming those who are really at fault here,
@martintin250
@martintin250 10 ай бұрын
This should be the highlight comment
@gamewithadam7235
@gamewithadam7235 8 ай бұрын
Why are they being fined? Force them to pay for the cleaning of the water. Get people to clean it and send the bill to them.
@muddyboots2531
@muddyboots2531 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this. One of my passions. I hate it with a passion.
@ukmayes1
@ukmayes1 9 ай бұрын
You're a hero to make this video. Reaching out and saying what's happening. It's terrible what the Water Companies are doing.
@jameswest6085
@jameswest6085 10 ай бұрын
well said, it's a constant source of national embarassment
@jenb2393
@jenb2393 10 ай бұрын
Absolutely disgusting god people are disappointing I'm glad you are making people aware of the issues I actually hope to own a large property in New Zealand and rewild it myself there's lots of amazing species here in New Zealand and there are also small predators that kill off many native birds so it'll have to be predator free to be a wildlife haven but I'm also quite into hunting as well so there's an issue with game animal management here so it'll be good to amke an example of a healthy ecosystem with lots of native wildlife with deer living healthy and have minimal effect on the ecosystem along with larger and stronger stags love the content keep doing what you are doing. Sorry for the enormous message.😅
@ConstantChaos1
@ConstantChaos1 10 ай бұрын
We should use photobioreactors to treat waste water, they are way better for the environment than the current system
@ConstantChaos1
@ConstantChaos1 10 ай бұрын
Oh damn I just edited this and lost the heart lol there was a typo lol
@ConstantChaos1
@ConstantChaos1 10 ай бұрын
Yay they gave it back best birthday ever
@jeremymanning2132
@jeremymanning2132 10 ай бұрын
Great video highlighting a widespread problem. Im 65 y.o. and have seen a huge change in our rivers and fish stocks Privatisation has been a disaster. A lack of investment and a population rising by x3 has caused this issue. I admire you bringing these things to public notice but to be honest you are fighting a losing battle. Most of the population are city dwellers who don't care or know about the countryside and the politicians are only concerned with money. Wildlife in Britain is doomed as is the human population globally. Sorry for being pessimistic but that is the reality.
@crocanut5701
@crocanut5701 9 ай бұрын
This is my hometown and I can confirm that the river is grim, thanks for highlighting this
@unni.m1959
@unni.m1959 10 ай бұрын
First
@LeaveCurious
@LeaveCurious 10 ай бұрын
That was fast!! 🥇
@unni.m1959
@unni.m1959 10 ай бұрын
@@LeaveCurious as always. Consistent champ😊
@stevejones7696
@stevejones7696 10 ай бұрын
They should be charged a million per leak until they go bankrupt, then we the people buy them for a pound until they are all back in public hands
@jakkuwolfinsomnia8058
@jakkuwolfinsomnia8058 9 ай бұрын
How hard is it to make a water processing plant ? Disgusting and monstrous government
@hurricanejanko7394
@hurricanejanko7394 10 ай бұрын
OK guys. As much as I love clean rivers, trees and nature here is why there is a significant flaw in what is happening. Reason behind is - this is UK. country bit different to other Western European countries. It all starts at your houses and it starts at your houses as government doesn’t want to take non-popular actions. This is not because of private sector companies but legislation. Few years back I spent a lot of money from BTC to refurb our house. Not being Englishman, I wanted some continental comforts of the house - windows that not lose heat, loft space that is usable, warm and accessible etc. One of which was external render of the house and getting rid of my pet hate - outdoor pipes. I am not living in Victorian mension this is a normal house, fact that I have bathroom is no longer a flex I dont need to tell the world about this. I can hide pipes inside the house as every reasonable nation under the sun does. So money went into it, upgraded pipes and to my surprise I learnt that black water from my house goes together with brown water (storm sewage) into the same outlet. This cant be - I spoken to plumber and he confirmed. This is not ecological I need to do something about but I literally cant! There is no way that I can separate my wastewater. I can store my roof water in the tank and use it. however drain water from irrigation system for the garden to create proper drainage on damaged soil cant go anywhere else than the same hole that my shit goes. So think for about this for a second: you have three types of sewage: industrial, black(housing) and brown(storm). Industrial under no circumstances should be mixed with anything understood. Water companies are very aware of volumes hitting them in each region. they cost companies they can be easily monitor - they can charge whatever they want to clean them. this is understood. Black water(domestic waste) is fluctuating slightly but constant. You can argue that new housing is putting dent of existing water waste infra making it harder to operate. Valid point but then companies are getting increased revenue from households hence they should increase they investment in correct infrastructure. Then we come to crux of the problem - brown water. Technically, water that requires very little attention from water management companies. If threaded properly can flow from the system, very easily. But vary during day to day and we all know how it is in England it rains a lot. In short period of time. And then sometimes not. But this is UK - where old money sleep well. This would mean that in 70s, 80, and 90s infrastructure would start to be upgraded to become more ecological. and in all European countries did. If it did, we wouldn’t have problem on this scale. Water that gets discharged cheapest to clean (or something doesnt require any treatment) but when mixed with heavy polluted industrial or house wastage they create ecological bomb because it all gets mixed. Volume in the treatment facility becomes problematic and gets dumped to rivers. Solution would be legislation where water companies needs to have separate infstra for rain water and waste water going all the way up to houses. Solution where each house needs to dig out their garden to and upgrade their derelict pipe system. You see where it goes to ? No one at right mind in government is going to propose that. Old money dont want to spend money on this. Homeowners ? English homeowners living in soggy, wet, not ventilated houses would actually be concerned by investing in this ? Yet, it is something that should be gradually built over last 60 years. There is a wind of change - people start to demand EPC houses not because they are fancy tree-hugging students but they feel this with their wallets how much it cost to have warm house. Maybe, one day they will also see that there is an actual benefit of having clean water around them.
@pauljohnson-jl4fv
@pauljohnson-jl4fv 10 ай бұрын
This is only one aspect of a corrupt system. Our entire infrastructure is crumbling. Well done in highlighting the issue.
@camelionpen
@camelionpen 8 ай бұрын
The worst is that there's private companies profiting from this. Novara media have made interesting contributions to this discussion!
@MrZkitZ
@MrZkitZ 8 ай бұрын
I heard Tom Scott is taking a break from youtube, and Im very happy I found your youtube channel ! best regards
@lj3605
@lj3605 9 ай бұрын
It's not just the water companies, private sewage treatments often discharge into watercourses during high rainfall events, and they're compromised by people using bleaches not suitable for their treatment systems. The Environment Agency doesn't bother to investigate or pursue these discharges because it'd rather go for the big headline cases. I'm not going to say too much but I work within the water industry so have first hand experience of these events and the EA
@jakefry6563
@jakefry6563 10 ай бұрын
Water should not be an investment but an environmental and societal need
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