
Whitstable and Seasalter water issues continue into second week
Steve Andrews, head of operations control at South East Water, said the company really was "truly sorry for the disruption".He added: "I would ask all customers to use water for essential use over the next few days, just so we can get the system returned to normal."We're seeing really high demand and that's preventing the system recovering as it normally would do."Rosie Duffield, the independent MP for Canterbury, has written to the company.She told BBC Radio Kent: "It beggars belief there's no forward planning for instances like this, when we know we're expecting more houses to be built, when we know climate change is real."Jane Bowyer from Cheesemakers of Canterbury has lost four days of production."This will result in perhaps a lack of cheese at Christmas" she said.
Philip Harris from the Sportsman pub in Seasalter said he had lost about £30,000.He said: "We lost a whole Saturday, half a Friday, a whole Wednesday, so we've missed out on probably 250 to 300 customers."We were having to phone people an hour before they were due to be here, because the water suddenly went off."
Mr Andrews said: "We are investing into our network but we have seen a real increase in customer demand over the last few years."We're looking to build a new reservoir at Broadoak. We have a plan for new big trunk mains to transfer water, as there's no natural water in the Whitstable area."We've got more gangs than we've ever had undertaking repairs."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
3 hours ago
- The Guardian
Nordic countries hit by ‘truly unprecedented' heatwave
Cold Nordic countries are being seared by 'truly unprecedented' heat, as hot weather strengthened and lengthened by carbon pollution continues to roast northern Europe. A weather station in the Norwegian part of the Arctic Circle recorded temperatures above 30C (86F) on 13 days in July, while Finland has had three straight weeks with 30C heat. Scientists say it is the longest streak in records going back to 1961, and 50% longer than the previous record. 'Truly unprecedented heatwave still in full swing with maximum today about 32-33C,' said Mika Rantanen, a climate scientist at the Finnish Meteorological Institute, in a social media post on Thursday. 'Even the Arctic regions … have seen three weeks above 25C, and may rival tomorrow their August heat records.' The Norwegian Meteorological Institute said temperatures above 30C were recorded on 12 days in July by at least one station in its three northernmost counties. Although the country had a brief respite last week as hot weather moved north and east, the institute said it expected temperatures of 30C might be reached again over the weekend. 'We have some hot days ahead of us in northern Norway,' it said. In Sweden, meteorologists said long-term heatwaves were noted at several stations in the north of the country, with a weather station in Haparanda measuring 25C or more for 14 days in a row. In Jokkmokk, Lappland, the heatwave lasted for 15 days. 'To find a longer period at these stations, you have to go back more than a century,' said Sverker Hellström, a scientist at the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute. Blistering heat swept northern Europe in mid-July, driven by hot waters off the Norwegian northern coast and a stubborn area of high pressure that brought temperatures in the Nordics 8-10C above seasonal norms. The region has also since been hit by storms and lightning strikes that have sparked wildfires. The hot weather has taken people by surprise in a part of the continent better adapted to the cold. Researchers have found that countries such as the UK, Norway and Switzerland will face the greatest relative rise in uncomfortably hot days as the planet heats up, and have warned that their infrastructure is not well-suited to cope. On Wednesday, an ice rink in northern Finland opened its doors to people seeking refuge from the heat after they overfilled the local hospital's emergency room, according to Finnish media. On Thursday, herders warned that their reindeer were on the verge of dying in the heat. Swedish radio reported that foreign tourists heading north to Scandinavia for 'coolcations' had instead encountered dangerous heat warnings. 'As climate change progresses, exceptionally severe heatwaves will intensify,' said Heikki Tuomenvirta, a scientist at the Finnish Meteorological Institute. 'They are occurring more frequently, are more severe and last longer.'


Times
15 hours ago
- Times
Melrose defies tariffs and supply woes to beat profit forecast
A leading aerospace business's first-half profits were above forecasts in the face of disruption caused by President Trump's tariffs and long-running aerospace supply chain issues. Operating profits at Melrose, the owner of GKN Aerospace, were £310 million for the six months ended June 30, compared with a company-compiled analysts' consensus of £299 million. Revenue rose 6 per cent to £1.7 billion, driven by a particularly strong performance from Melrose's engines division, which supplies parts to the likes of Rolls-Royce and the US-based Pratt & Whitney. The performance sent shares up more than 5 per cent on a day that markets were backed into a retreat as Trump introduced a slew of fresh tariffs. Melrose was buoyed last week by news that the US-EU trade deal had granted a tariff exemption for aircraft and aviation parts, although it said on Friday it had successfully mitigated the 'direct impact' of the current levies on its half-year bottom line. The FTSE 100 group has a significant presence in the US, which makes up nearly two thirds of its sales, and it recently opened a multimillion-pound factory in San Diego. It does, however, run an operation in Mexico, which exports to both Europe and the United States. 'We delivered a strong performance in the first half with a 29 per cent improvement in profit and cashflow significantly stronger than last year despite the backdrop of supply chain and tariff disruptions,' Peter Dilnot, chief executive, said. • One-sided trade deal suggests outsider status has benefited Britain Melrose has benefited from a twin boom in defence and aviation. Conflict in Ukraine and the Middle East has led to governments increasing military spending budgets, while travel demand has soared in the post-pandemic era, leading to record order backlogs for new aircraft. It has, however, faced hurdles from wider supply chain issues affecting the aerospace industry, which have fuelled problems at the planemakers Boeing and Airbus. Those difficulties were further compounded by the additional complexity of Trump's trade levies. Dilnot said he was confident of delivering sustained increases in profit and cashflow in the years ahead and a £600 million free cashflow target by 2029. Melrose has managed to offset some of the impact from supply chain snarl-ups thanks to increasing demand for its aftermarket services, as companies look to get more life out of older aircraft. Dilnot said that despite lower growth forecasts for global air travel, 'constrained build rates' for new aircraft coupled with record order backlogs had forced airlines to make better use of their fleets, 'fuelling' aftermarket growth. • North Sea oil is a 'treasure chest' for the UK, says Donald Trump Operating profit at Melrose's engines division grew by more than a quarter to £261 million over the half-year period, alongside a 6 per cent rise in engine flying hours. Revenue increased 11 per cent to £781 million. Its structures division reported a near-third rise in operating profit to £63 million, with a strong 10 per cent revenue growth in defence. The company supplies parts for some of the largest defence programmes in the world, including Chinook helicopters and F-35 fighter jets. Recent contract awards include the extension of a six-year tie-up with BAE Systems to provide parts for its Eurofighter Typhoon jet, and a five-year deal with the US defence giant Lockheed Martin. Melrose's board has set an interim dividend of 2.4 pence per share for 2025, up 20 per cent year-on-year. The company is currently £91 million through a £250 million, 18-month, share buyback programme. Founded in 2003 by Christopher Miller, David Roper and Simon Peckham, Melrose floated on London's Aim market the same year. After rising to the FTSE 100, its market capitalisation now sits at about £6.87 billion.


Reuters
16 hours ago
- Reuters
US defense bill proposes examination of Apple display supplier
SAN FRANCISCO, Aug 1 (Reuters) - A measure added into a massive U.S. defense spending bill in recent weeks will, if passed, ask the Pentagon to determine whether one of Apple's (AAPL.O), opens new tab display suppliers should be listed as a Chinese military company. Being on the list does not block companies from doing business in the U.S. but will in coming years block them from being part of the U.S. military's supply chain. The bill, known as the National Defense Authorization Act, was approved in July by key committees in both houses of the U.S. Congress. The final bill, considered a "must-pass" because it funds the U.S. military, is expected to become law later in the year. When the bill was approved by the U.S. House of Representatives Armed Services Committee, a newly added amendment for the first time asked the U.S. Defense Department to consider, opens new tab whether BOE Technology Group Co , listed on Apple's official suppliers list, should be added to a list of firms that allegedly aid China's military. BOE and Apple did not respond to requests for comment. Craig Singleton, a China expert at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a Washington think-tank, said Beijing had offered billions of dollars in subsidies, tax breaks and loans to help firms such as BOE dominate global panel production. "This creates a single‑source vulnerability that could be easily exploited to disrupt or degrade U.S. military operations, not to mention undermine commercial supply chains, during a conflict or period of heightened bilateral tension with Beijing," Singleton added. A study published last month by New York-based NERA Economic Consulting and commissioned by BOE's U.S. subsidiary found that the display industry, which includes major Korean players such as Samsung Electronics and LG Electronics, remains highly competitive, with no single player capable of significantly affecting global prices. "There is no credible risk of a supply chain disruption by mainland China display manufacturers," the report said.