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South East latest part of England officially in drought
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Author:  captain cab [ Mon Feb 20, 2012 7:12 pm ]
Post subject:  South East latest part of England officially in drought

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-17102615

South East latest part of England officially in drought


Much of southern and eastern England is officially in a state of drought, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) has announced.

The announcement came as Environment Secretary Caroline Spelman hosted a drought summit.

In parts of south-east England groundwater levels are lower than in the infamously dry summer of 1976.

Water companies are ready to bring in hosepipe bans from early spring, where necessary, Defra says.

The firms have agreed measures to reduce the environmental impact of dry conditions, including reducing water losses and improving leak detection, as well as encouraging customers to save water.

The Environment Agency will also take steps such as monitoring the impact of the dry weather on fisheries and wildlife.

Ms Spelman said after the summit: "Drought is already an issue this year with the South East, Anglia and other parts of the UK now officially in drought, and more areas are likely to be affected as we continue to experience a prolonged period of very low rainfall.

'Use less'

"It is not just the responsibility of government, water companies and businesses to act against drought.

"We are asking for the help of everyone by urging them to use less water and to start now."


Places in drought

Lincolnshire
Cambridgeshire
Hampshire
West Sussex
East Sussex
Kent
London
Surrey
Berkshire
Hertfordshire
Buckinghamshire
Oxfordshire
parts of Bedfordshire
parts of Northamptonshire
west Norfolk
east Gloucestershire
Source: Defra

Mary Creagh, Labour's shadow environment secretary, described the drought summit as being "more talk and no action".

"The Tory-led government is out of touch with the pressures facing families - the fact that it has postponed its long-awaited Water Bill means that there will be no action to tackle unsustainable water usage or to help households facing rising water bills for at least another two years," she said.

Water companies, farmers and wildlife groups were invited to discuss the situation at the summit.

Thames Water's sustainability director Richard Aylard said: "There is a high chance we will need restrictions at some stage this summer unless either we get a lot of rain or fantastic co-operation from customers using less water."

He urged people to turn off taps while cleaning their teeth, take shorter showers, fix leaks and only wash laundry with a full load.

The South East joins parts of eastern England which have been in a drought situation since last summer.

That contrasts markedly with Scotland, where reservoirs are between 93% and 97% full.

Ms Spelman said she wanted water companies to look at the possibility of connecting pipe networks so they could transfer water from wetter areas.

Severn Trent's water director, Andy Smith, said each water company had tended to focus on its own area.

"We should be looking at interconnecting the networks between the various water companies.

Low river levels

"There will be opportunities with relatively small levels of investment to make inter-connections between different organisations to try and get the water from the north and the west where it's relatively wet down to the south and the east."

The lack of rain, over the course of two dry winters, appeared to be continuing last month.

South-east England received just two-thirds of the long-term average rainfall for January.

Rainfall has been below average for 18 of the last 23 months in the Thames Valley region and London.

Flows in the River Lee, which passes through Hertfordshire and parts of north-east London, are at less than a quarter of the long-term average for the waterway.

And the Kennet, in Wiltshire, has seen flows of just 31% of its average levels.

The river has dried up completely to the west of Marlborough.

Meanwhile, the Darent, in Kent, is at extremely low levels, as is the Wye in Surrey.

Image

Author:  captain cab [ Mon Feb 20, 2012 7:17 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: South East latest part of England officially in drought

Image

Author:  edders23 [ Mon Feb 20, 2012 7:20 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: South East latest part of England officially in drought

Yawn this news is soooooo old yes we are in drought but thats what you get when so many new houses are being Built in the area they really should take availability of water supply into account when formulating housing policies

The puddle looks to be its usual level at the moment so still plenty of water about although ours doesn't come from it

Author:  grandad [ Mon Feb 20, 2012 7:35 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: South East latest part of England officially in drought

edders23 wrote:
Yawn this news is soooooo old yes we are in drought but thats what you get when so many new houses are being Built in the area they really should take availability of water supply into account when formulating housing policies

The puddle looks to be its usual level at the moment so still plenty of water about although ours doesn't come from it

By the puddle do you mean Rutland Water? Because the last time I went past a couple of weeks ago it looked very low to me.

Author:  wannabeeahack [ Mon Feb 20, 2012 7:59 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: South East latest part of England officially in drought

it [edited by admin] it down here yesterday

the water board charge us to drain away surface water, maybe i should sell it to them

Author:  gusmac [ Mon Feb 20, 2012 8:25 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: South East latest part of England officially in drought

captain cab wrote:
Image

Not as much as we are :lol:
Quote:
That contrasts markedly with Scotland, where reservoirs are between 93% and 97% full.

Author:  Sussex [ Mon Feb 20, 2012 9:11 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: South East latest part of England officially in drought

I don't have any problems with a long hot summer.

More people holidaying down here rather than bankrupt Europe.

Author:  edders23 [ Mon Feb 20, 2012 9:48 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: South East latest part of England officially in drought

grandad wrote:
edders23 wrote:
Yawn this news is soooooo old yes we are in drought but thats what you get when so many new houses are being Built in the area they really should take availability of water supply into account when formulating housing policies

The puddle looks to be its usual level at the moment so still plenty of water about although ours doesn't come from it

By the puddle do you mean Rutland Water? Because the last time I went past a couple of weeks ago it looked very low to me.


No thats its new natural level Anglian water have lowered the level to create a large wetland area for birds it is not allowed to get any higher also at the same time they doubled the size of wing pumping station and put in a new pipeline to a place called hannington wherever that is but the new level is nothing to do with the extra abstraction rate just for the benefit of the wildlife which is what attracts the visitors and the huge amounts of money they spend on parking which pour into the coffers of Anglian water

Author:  wannabeeahack [ Mon Feb 20, 2012 11:08 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: South East latest part of England officially in drought

two words

de

salination


or is that one word

havent "they" noticed we are a "ISLAND" and to be an "ISLAND" you have to be surrounded by "WATER"

Hull, Liverpool, Bristol and Skegness, 4 plants, sorted, no more hose pipe bans ever

Author:  wannabeeahack [ Mon Feb 20, 2012 11:09 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: South East latest part of England officially in drought

I can be subject to a hosepipe ban and then get soaked by the farmer spraying his field behind our house, we cant even hang washing out....

Author:  captain cab [ Mon Feb 20, 2012 11:34 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: South East latest part of England officially in drought

Sussex wrote:
I don't have any problems with a long hot summer.

More people holidaying down here rather than bankrupt Europe.



Having met you a few times my freind....it irks me to suggest you bathing less....especially seeing how trevor treats wine :lol: :wink:

CC

Author:  grandad [ Tue Feb 21, 2012 6:38 am ]
Post subject:  Re: South East latest part of England officially in drought

wannabeeahack wrote:
two words

de

salination


or is that one word

havent "they" noticed we are a "ISLAND" and to be an "ISLAND" you have to be surrounded by "WATER"

Hull, Liverpool, Bristol and Skegness, 4 plants, sorted, no more hose pipe bans ever

That may be a tad expensive.
A national pipeline may be better or as has been stated before, stop building in the places that can't support the extra population.

Author:  Nidge2 [ Tue Feb 21, 2012 7:09 am ]
Post subject:  Re: South East latest part of England officially in drought

wannabeeahack wrote:
two words

de

salination


or is that one word

havent "they" noticed we are a "ISLAND" and to be an "ISLAND" you have to be surrounded by "WATER"

Hull, Liverpool, Bristol and Skegness, 4 plants, sorted, no more hose pipe bans ever



That's what's called progress mate, something this country doesn't embrace very well.

Author:  Nidge2 [ Tue Feb 21, 2012 7:11 am ]
Post subject:  Re: South East latest part of England officially in drought

wannabeeahack wrote:
I can be subject to a hosepipe ban and then get soaked by the farmer spraying his field behind our house, we cant even hang washing out....


They are exempt because they draw their water from underground.

Author:  cabby john [ Tue Feb 21, 2012 1:10 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: South East latest part of England officially in drought

What a nonsense when you think about it! As I write it is drizzling/raining quite nicely in good ole rainy Wales that also happens to have French bottled water in their supermarkets :roll:

If they can build pipe lines for oil - sewage - and whatever else then it is not beyond them to pipe water from other parts of the country that has it in abundance - Obama rolled out a jobs led austerity plan to improve the infrastructure of the U.S.A, basically to make their roads the best in the world. We should follow a similar scheme by linking up to rivers/canals/waterways/lakes/whatever, and it has got to be done NOW, as the South East has taken on continental weather for a number of years that is now a permanent fixture.

This would create thousands of jobs along the way that would probably kick start the economy on its own............jeez I am wasted on here :roll:

Just read this in our local rag.............http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales ... -30370853/

The daft part is that I think we also supply Birmingham.................and our water rates are higher than theirs :shock:

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