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£7.3m investment in River Ouse health

We're spending £7.3 million investment at one of our wastewater treatment sites to boost water quality in the River Ouse, to the north of Lewes.

Three major projects in Barcombe

These projects at our Barcombe site, north of Lewes, will help improve the ecology of streams feeding the river, cut storm overflows into it, and increase capacity to handle expected population growth in the area.

We have spent about £4 million on a system which removes phosphates from the treated wastewater. Phosphates cause algal bloom and lead to the choking of rivers and damage to the ecosystem and habitats.  

Barcombe is one of 110 sites where we have added in this removal process for phosphates in recent years, in support of the Environment Agency’s work to prevent such chemicals, also including nitrate fertilisers, impacting river health. 

We are also spending almost £2 million to build a new glass-coated steel storm tank, which will help the site cope when surface water overloads the network following prolonged rainfall events. The new tank will hold 300 tonnes of stormwater, before it re-enters the full treatment process when volumes drop.

This means that the capacity of the site has increased from the treatment of 20.8 litres a second to now being able to treat to 32.3 litres a second, both reducing storm overflows and allowing for expected population growth in the area.

John Penicud, Director of Wastewater Operations at Southern Water, said:

“There are many contributors to river health – including farming – but we know we have a key part to play too. We are investing in projects like this across the region to deliver real tangible benefits to customers and the environment.”