Northumbrian Water Ltd has been fined a total of £30,000 for two sewage pollution incidents that happened last year.
In two separate cases that were both heard before Peterlee Magistrates’ Court on 22 April, the water company admitted and was sentenced for two offences of discharging polluted matter into watercourses.
Chris Bunting, prosecuting for the Environment Agency, told the court that the first pollution incident affected Kyo Burn, the source of the River Team, situated to the south west of Stanley, in June.
The watercourse was running an unusual grey colour and smelt of blocked drains, and an ecological survey found sewage fungus and dead invertebrates along a 1.8 kilometre stretch of the watercourse.
Investigating officers found that the burn had been affected by sewage discharge from a storm overflow on the Tanfield Trunk Sewer.
In normal circumstances, the storm overflow only allows a discharge in times of heavy rain, to alleviate flood risk. But the overflow had operated incorrectly because of a blockage, and the company had not been aware because its monitoring equipment on the sewer was not working correctly.
The second pollution incident occurred in August in Bowburn Beck, which flows into the River Wear south of Durham City.
This watercourse had been affected with sewage when a blockage in a sewer had caused a manhole cover to lift, allowing sewage to flow out, across a farmland and into the beck.
Northumbrian Water was informed about the problem, but failed to investigate the issue for four days. It claimed that it had difficulty accessing the site because of the presence of dogs on the farm, although alternative access routes could have been considered.
The firm eventually found that the blockage had been caused by rags, oil, fat and grease.
Water samples and an ecological survey showed that a one-kilometre stretch of Bowburn Beck had been significantly affected. There were high numbers of dead and dying invertebrates, with a small number of dead fish. There was also a thick sewage fungus present.
Northumbrian Water Ltd admitted one offence for each of the pollution incidents. For the Kyo Burn offence, the company was fined £14,000 and ordered to pay £3,996.04 costs and a £120 victim surcharge. For the Bowburn Beck offence, the firm was fined £16,000 and ordered to pay £4,772.52 costs.
(CD)
Construction News
24/04/2014
Nothumbrian Water Fined For Pollution Incidents

22/05/2025
Oxford City Council has approved plans for a new, modern community centre in the heart of Blackbird Leys.
The council's planning committee gave the go-ahead on Tuesday 20 May, paving the way for construction to begin later this year.
The new centre is part of a broader redevelopment of the Distric

22/05/2025
Leading construction and facilities management company GRAHAM has officially commenced a new repairs and maintenance contract with Sandwell Property Care, part of the Council's Corporate Landlord team.
The contract covers the borough's extensive portfolio of non-housing properties, and will see GRA

22/05/2025
A significant milestone has been reached at Royal Bolton Hospital, as Bolton NHS Foundation Trust officially broke ground on the £38 million redevelopment of its Maternity and Women’s Health Unit.
The work is being carried out in partnership with Robertson Construction North West and marks the sta

22/05/2025
Galliford Try's Environment business has been honoured with a prestigious Silver Green World Award in recognition of its outstanding environmental efforts at the Tophill Low Water Treatment Works (WTW).
The project was selected from more than 1,200 entries worldwide, highlighting the global signifi

22/05/2025
A major new cement import facility planned for the North West of England is set to bolster growth in the UK construction sector while advancing the industry's efforts to reduce carbon emissions.
The deep-water terminal, to be built at the former P&O site at Gladstone Dock in Liverpool, is the resul

22/05/2025
A major new drainage initiative is under way across Oxfordshire, with work now started to clean and empty every highway gully in the county annually.
The £2.6 million programme, which began last month in Wheatley, will see nearly 145,000 highway drains, gullies, manholes, and catchpits cleaned by t

22/05/2025
Housing association Gentoo has announced a landmark investment programme aimed at improving more than 4,000 homes across Sunderland during 2025/26, in one of the city's largest ever housing improvement initiatives.
The multi-million-pound scheme will deliver a wide range of upgrades to thousands of

22/05/2025
Bilfinger UK has secured a key contract with National Gas to help maintain the flow of gas across the National Transmission System (NTS), a move that will create up to 100 jobs and support vital national infrastructure.
As Principal Designer and Principal Contractor, Bilfinger will lead a multi-dis

22/05/2025
A new strategic partnership has been formed between Network Rail Property, Places for London, and the London Borough of Lambeth to drive forward a major regeneration of London Waterloo Station and the surrounding South Bank neighbourhood.
The collaboration follows the publication of the Waterloo St

22/05/2025
Wythenshawe Park has seen a series of improvements aimed at making it more accessible and enjoyable for all visitors, as part of Manchester City Council's £157,000 Clean, Green, Safer Manchester Investment.
The funding supports a wider initiative to enhance green spaces across the city and has been