South West Water has completed a £5 million investment in wastewater treatment in East Devon.
Ottery St Mary Wastewater Treatment Works has been decommissioned and a new state-of-the-art works has been constructed next to the existing works at Fluxton. The old site at Ottery remains as an operational site but is now only used for flow control and storm storage.
The project took three years to devise, develop and deliver. The new works was designed and built by South West Water’s H5O delivery alliance in partnership with the company’s wastewater team.
South West Water Scientist Dr Nick Gardner explained:
“Ottery St Mary Wastewater Treatment Works was coming to the end of its useful life. Parts of the works dated back to the 1960s, though there had probably been some sort of treatment process on the site for years before that. The works was difficult to access and had become challenging to operate, and as the population of Ottery grew, it struggled to cope.”
Wastewater from all of Ottery St Mary is now treated at the new Fluxton and Ottery St Mary Wastewater Treatment Works, which serves a population of around 7,200.
The original works at Fluxton, which treated waste from Tipton St John, Fluxton, West Hill and about a third of Ottery itself, was left running while the water company built a completely brand new works.
To combat the risk of flooding from the River Otter, the works is built at elevation rather than at ground height, which was another design challenge.
The new plant also incorporates a new phosphorous removal process - phosphorous has also been linked with algal blooms in Lyme Bay, which is where the River Otter ends up near Budleigh Salterton.
Fluxton is now one of South West Water’s most efficient and technologically advanced activated sludge treatment works.
“SAS (Surplus Activated Sludge) is a bit weird and
Owen Mace has taken over as Director of the British Plastics Federation (BPF) Plastic Pipes Group on the retirement of Caroline Ayres. He was previously Standards and Technical Manager for the group.
Hear how United Utilities is accelerating its investment to reduce spills from storm overflows across the Northwest.