Water firm fined after sewage leaks into County Durham stream
Northumbrian Water have been fined £240,000 for the incidents in 2017
Last updated 19th Jan 2022
A major water company has been fined £240,000 after a damaged manhole led to two unauthorised sewage discharges into a stream.
Untreated sewage leaked into Coundon Burn, Bishop Auckland, County Durham, on March 13 2017, then again the following day further downstream.
A member of the public rang Northumbrian Water after seeing effluent in the stream and the firm, which had a turnover of £834.6m that year, sent workers to free a blockage in the sewer.
But it was likely they only succeeded in forcing it further down the pipe and there was a further overflow around 320 metres downstream the next day.
Workers only managed to remove the blockage after they used equipment to break into the Victorian pipework, finding that a brick entangled in sewage "rags" had caused the build-up, the court heard.
Analysis found that the stream was polluted, and discoloured water was found to be coming from the stream and flowing into the River Gaunless.
Thick sewage fungus was found coating the stream for 300 metres and was visible in it for another 300 metres, the prosecution said.
Subsequent checks found that a manhole had been damaged further upstream from the blockages, possibly due to farm machinery, the court heard, and bricks had fallen into the sewer.
Judge Robert Adams, during a lengthy sentencing exercise, fined the firm £240,000 and ordered it to pay the Environment Agency's costs, which were more than £34,000.
He said Northumbrian Water had taken steps to improve its performance since then and was "clearly not the worst offender of all the water companies".
The judge said in his opinion the manhole that partially collapsed into the sewer had been subject to "long-term deterioration".
Northumbrian Water admitted two breaches of environmental legislation, namely that it caused an unauthorised water discharge activity, at a hearing in October.
Northumbrian Water serves 1.3 million properties and 2.7 million people in the north-east of England.
It has one million manholes on its system, 6,000 of which are on agricultural land, the court was told.