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LONDON, ENGLAND – JUNE 03: Nature prescribing officer Gareth Chalmers leads volunteers on a river cleanup, organised by the waterway advocacy group Thames21, on June 03, 2021 in London, England. The event, in partnership with Enfield Council, invited volunteers to help remove litter and invasive plants such as Himalayan Balsam, on a stretch of Salmons Brook, a minor tributary of the River Lea in North London. The group aims to help restore habitat and re-wild stretches of the many waterways that run in and around the capital. (Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)
Sewage impunity

Sewage impunity

LONDON, ENGLAND – JUNE 03: Nature prescribing officer Gareth Chalmers leads volunteers on a river cleanup, organised by the waterway advocacy group Thames21, on June 03, 2021 in London, England. The event, in partnership with Enfield Council, invited volunteers to help remove litter and invasive plants such as Himalayan Balsam, on a stretch of Salmons Brook, a minor tributary of the River Lea in North London. The group aims to help restore habitat and re-wild stretches of the many waterways that run in and around the capital. (Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

Last year England’s 10 privatised water companies paid £1.4 billion in dividends to shareholders and at the same time allowed more than 300,000 discharges of raw sewage into rivers and the sea. Most of the discharges were technically legal under storm overflow permits because unlike other rich countries the UK has accepted the idea that there’s no accounting for storms in the sewage management business. But 554 spillages were illegal because they breached overflow permits. Even so, responses to a freedom of information inquiry by the FT show that the Environment Agency has issued a total of four fines in four years to a value of £94 million, £90 million of which is accounted for by one fine levied against Southern Water. The water companies are finding it pays to spill.

Photograph Dan Kitwood/Getty Images