MS, Cabinet Minister for
Rural Resilience and Sustainability: On 22 May, Dŵr Cymru Welsh
Water issued a boil water notice affecting communities in Rhondda
Cynon Taf, following an operational issue at the Maerdy Water
Treatment Works.
The notice was issued as a precaution following an issue
affecting the chemical dosing process at the treatment works.
This was caused by a burst pipe feeding coagulant into the
treatment process. While this meant the treatment process was not
operating as intended, water continued to pass through the
remainder of the treatment stages and was therefore only
partially treated. This incident did not involve excess chemicals
entering the water supply, as has been suggested in some
commentary, but rather reduced effectiveness of part of the
treatment process.
In response, Dŵr Cymru Welsh Water temporarily stopped water from
entering the network and advised customers to boil tap water
while the issue was investigated and resolved. Although the
repair was completed within hours, water already within the
system required further management, and the boil water notice
remained in place until water quality had been fully confirmed.
The notice has now been fully lifted across all affected areas,
following consistently clear water quality sampling, confirmation
that the network has been fully flushed, and all supplies
restored to the high standards customers rightly expect. The
notice was lifted through a phased approach between Monday 25 May
and Tuesday 26 May. The phased approach was deemed appropriate
due to the size of the area affected and the time it took to
allow fully treated water to move through the system and ensuring
test results consistently confirmed that supplies met drinking
water quality standards.
Customers can now use their tap water as normal for all purposes,
including drinking, cooking and brushing teeth, and no public
health advice remains in place.
I recognise the disruption this incident has caused to residents,
businesses and public services, particularly during the recent
period of warm weather, and I thank communities for their
patience and understanding while the issue was resolved safely.
I would also like to thank Dŵr Cymru Welsh Water, Rhondda Cynon
Taf County Borough Council, public health partners and all
responding organisations for their coordinated and professional
response, including support provided to vulnerable households and
priority sites. During the incident Dŵr Cymru Welsh Water saw an
increase in customers registering for their priority service. I would
like to highlight the importance of this service to all customers
who identify as vulnerable before an incident occurs.
Dŵr Cymru Welsh Water is providing compensation to affected
household and non-household customers.
Payments will be made directly into customers' bank accounts
within 10 days where details are held, or by cheque where this
information is not available. Household customers will receive
£20 per day for the duration of the boil water notice, with
non-household customers able to apply for appropriate goodwill
payments where they have experienced additional costs or loss.
Further information is available on the Dŵr Cymru Welsh Water
website.
Dŵr Cymru Welsh Water has now moved into stand‑down and recovery,
and bottled water stations were stood down at midday on 27 May.
Dŵr Cymru Welsh Water will undertake a post‑incident review to
identify lessons and strengthen resilience and preparedness. This
will be subject to independent scrutiny by the Drinking Water
Inspectorate, which will investigate the incident and ensure that
any necessary further action is taken.