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The 180-ton ‘wet wipe island' that's clogging up the Thames

The 180-ton ‘wet wipe island' that's clogging up the Thames

Telegraph2 days ago
To a casual observer, the pair of mechanical excavators raking through the mulch on the Thames's southern foreshore might well signify little. It's a quiet spot at the foot of London's Hammersmith Bridge, overlooked by a towpath and a few passing swans. But something major is happening here: the first-of-its-kind mechanised removal of what has been locally dubbed ' wet wipe island '.
Surveys suggest this stomach-churning build-up of detritus has changed the very course of the river. Yet, until now, the work of tackling it has largely been left to volunteers for Thames21, an environmental charity. In Wellington boots and protective gloves, they have stalked the exposed shore at low tide, picking out wet wipes that Londoners have flushed down toilets – and which have, over the years, amalgamated into something far more gruesome than the sum of their parts.
The numbers alone are grim: in the past eight years, volunteers have collected more than 140,000 wet wipes spewed into the river when storm overflows discharge sewage during periods of heavy rainfall. Thames Water clears 3.8 billion wipes from its network every year, at an annual cost of £18m.
The 'island' of these that has formed near Hammersmith Bridge, where the river bends and the water moves slowly, is roughly the size of two tennis courts. According to modelling by the Port of London Authority (PLA), which has now taken the lead on the expensive clean-up operation, it weighs 180 tons, or the same as 15 double-decker buses. It's mostly composed of wet wipes clumped up with twigs, and has grown as high as a metre in some places. '[An] embarrassment to the capital,' the PLA has said.
Were it to appear in a Don DeLillo novel, this outsized agglomeration would offer a discomfiting metaphor for how we live: as rapacious consumers who bury our waste beneath our city, creating an underworld we'd rather not consider. And for some years, indeed, the dogged, strong-stomached volunteers have shouldered the burden of doing so.
'When [they] are there, they [realise] it's worse than they expected,' says Liz Gyekye from Thames21, which has monitored this side of the bridge since 2017. 'You do hear people saying, 'I didn't know how bad the problem is…' Once you get onto the foreshore, [you can see the wet wipes] are everywhere.'
It is feared they can harm wildlife and ecology locally, as well as further afield. The problem, she says, is that the wipes contain plastic, which breaks down into microplastics. These can then make their way into the stomachs of animals, according to studies. 'It will flow into oceans eventually and fish will be eating it and we eat the fish,' says Gyekye.
Despite this unappetising prospect, we continue to flush the wipes down our toilets when they should be disposed of in the bin. Even better, Gyekye adds, is not buying them at all.
'We've always put out the message, 'bin it, don't flush it',' she says. '[And] we urge people to use alternatives. They're convenient but the best thing is not to use them.'
Although wet wipes were invented in the middle of the 20th century, their widespread use – and hence the problem of their disposal – is a relatively recent phenomenon.
'In the 1970s and 1980s, people used cotton wool and water to wipe their babies' bottoms,' says Gyekye. 'It's only from the 1990s they started marketing this innovation. People aren't just using them for babies but to remove make-up.'
Some 11 billion are used every year in the UK, with about 90 per cent containing plastic. In London, so-called 'nappy valley' areas like Battersea are responsible for particularly high usage, Gyekye suggests.
This summer, inspired by the charity's action, the PLA is trying a different method to clear away the wet wipe island, deploying specially commissioned excavators to rake the foreshore, gather up the wipes and remove them, after which they will be taken to a skip and disposed of. The work, mostly funded by the PLA and started this week, will take a month and is thought to be costing hundreds of thousands of pounds. The excavators are being stored on the grounds of the adjacent independent St Paul's School while not in use.
'Frankly it is disgusting,' says Mark Anderson, the PLA's head of corporate affairs, of the wet wipe island. 'We are just as frustrated as anybody, and have wanted to see this addressed for years.'
The completion of a new ' super sewer ' (the Thames Tideway Tunnel), the interest and financial commitment 'have now aligned to get this going', he adds.
If it's emblematic of our throwaway culture, and the mountains of waste we generate, it is also arguably a sign of how poorly we care for our waterways. Last year, a report from The Rivers Trust found that no single stretch of river in England or Northern Ireland was in good overall health, and that toxic chemicals that remain in ecosystems for decades pollute every stretch of English rivers. Untreated sewage spills were found to blight most of our rivers.
In the capital, the sewerage system was historically designed to discharge into the rivers, to prevent sewage from backing up into people's homes. Before Joseph Bazalgette created the network for Victorian London, raw sewage flowed into the Thames, from where London drew its drinking water supply.
'A portion of the inhabitants of the metropolis are made to consume, in some form or another, a portion of their own excrement, and moreover, to pay for the privilege,' observed microbiologist Arthur Hassall in 1850.
Cholera epidemics served to illustrate the toll this took on people's health, although at the time the disease was believed to be airborne, carried by the stench of the river.
Bazalgette engineered his way out of this, but his system was not designed to cope with a population the size of the capital's current one. After huge growth in the 19th century, there were 6.5 million people in London by the start of the 20th century. Today that figure is closer to nine million, and the city once again seems overwhelmed by its own waste. In 2023, at least 14.2 billion litres of sewage ended up in the Thames, according to figures obtained by the Liberal Democrats.
Work is under way to reduce this. In February this year the Thames Tideway Tunnel became fully connected. It is expected to reduce sewage discharges into the tidal Thames by 95 per cent, including at the location where the island has formed.
Thames Water, which has been criticised for its handling of the general problem, has promised £9.5bn (in 2022-23 prices) of investment over the next five years to safeguard the environment and improve river health. The water company and the Environment Agency are working with the PLA to tackle wet wipe island.
'We continue to work with partners to create a better River Thames for people and wildlife,' says Charlie Wood, the London director of the Environment Agency.
The Government also plans to ban wet wipes containing plastic, something Thames21 has campaigned for.
'This is part of our wider plan to rebuild the water system, which includes a record £104bn investment to halve sewage spills by 2030 and a new, powerful regulator responsible for the entire water sector – created by abolishing Ofwat and merging four water regulators into one,' says a spokesman for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs.
Back near Hammersmith Bridge, a couple of passers-by look on as the excavators continue to rake away at the wet wipe problem. London continues to go about its business, consuming and then discarding material things in frightening numbers. But DeLillo's Underworld, in which waste is a central theme, carries a haunting warning. As one character tells Nick Shay, the novel's protagonist: 'What we excrete comes back to consume us.'
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