- Government expands plan to tackle storm overflows, including
all coastal and estuary sites
- Marine-protected areas and shellfish water-protected areas
made a priority
- Plan to drive £60 billion capital investment over next 25
years - the largest infrastructure programme in water company
history.
Action to tackle sewage pollution and clean up our waterways has
been expanded, Environment Secretary Thérèse Coffey has confirmed
today. All coastal and estuary storm overflows are now included
in the largest infrastructure programme in water company history.
The updated Storm Overflows Discharge
Reduction Plan sets out stringent targets to protect
people and the environment; and prioritises for early action
areas used for bathing, for growing shellfish or with high
ecological importance.
The additions to the Plan will also mean that Marine Protected
Areas and shellfish water protected areas will also be added to
the ‘high priority sites’ list, alongside Sites of Special
Scientific Interest (SSSI) and bathing waters.
The expanded plan will result in an estimated increase in capital
investment in the water system of £60 billion to tackle storm
overflows, up from the £56 billion announced in 2022.
This is part of continued action announced in the Plan for Water,
which sets out government’s strategy to hold water companies to
account and manage the pressures on our water resources through
more investment, stronger regulation and tougher enforcement.
Environment Secretary Thérèse Coffey said:
As a coastal MP, I am determined to address the damage sewage
discharges have on our coastlines.
Water companies must clean up their act and our Plan means no
overflow will be left behind in our efforts to clean up our
waterways.
Through more investment, stronger regulation and tougher
enforcement of the water sector we will tackle pollution from
every storm overflow in the country.
The expansion comes after a recent High
Court ruling in favour of the government’s Storm
Overflows Discharge Reduction Plan. The government won on all
claims considered by the High Court, meaning the plans were
considered lawful. The ruling also outlined that the government’s
plan goes ‘substantially’ further than the law to drive a
reduction in storm overflow discharges. We are expanding the Plan
further still.
As part of robust government action, the targets set out in the
Plan will now apply to every storm overflow in England – an
increase from 91% coverage to 100%. The targets include
requirements for water companies to:
- Improve 100% of storm overflows discharging into or near
every designated bathing water; and improve 75% of overflows
discharging to high priority sites by 2035
- Improve all remaining storm overflows, regardless of
location, by 2050.
These plans strike the right balance between the need for
investment and the impact on consumers. Under this Plan, there
will be no changes to bills until 2025. Eliminating all
discharges – as has been called for by some - could cost between
£120 billion and £600 billion, increasing annual water bills by
between £271 and £817 by 2049.
Storm overflows are a feature of combined
sewerage systems, designed to prevent sewage backing up
into properties and stop mains pipes bursting. There are strict
permit conditions for when and how they should be used to protect
our environment. Today’s announcement follows
a six week
public consultation earlier this year.