Southern Water has reported that work to reduce storm overflows in Whitstable is starting to see some positive results.

Image: Jon Yates, Pathfinder Delivery Lead for Whitstable
Whitstable is home to one of the water company’s six pathfinder projects across its region that look at new solutions to reduce storm overflows. The work is being led by Southern Water’s Clean Rivers and Seas Task Force.
The teams have been busy in the Whitstable area and have carried out a number of interventions that are starting to make a positive impact and reduce storm overflows and help achieve the goal of reducing them by 20 per cent by 2025.
The work to date in Whitstable has included;
- Installed over 500 water butts in and around Tankerton beach
- Reconfiguring Swalecliffe Wastewater Treatment Works to Utilise the on site storm water storage before the long sea outfall is used. This will help reduce storm overflows from the long sea outfall by 30 per cent. This has already prevented a number of storm overflows since being put in place in August.
- Investing more than £20 million on upgrades to Swalecliffe Wastewater Treatment Works
- Working with key local groups to provide water quality testing kits
- Utilising greener solutions over traditional methods of construction to manage surface water in different ways. This includes the installation of roadside rain gardens and looking to remove surface water from the foul network by green parks and relocating surface water connections.
Southern Water said it is keeping key groups, businesses organisations and communities informed regularly of its work in the area through regular meetings.
Alongside this the utility is looking at using new technology that uses artificial intelligence and rainfall data to plan ahead of weather events and utilise the space in the sewer network for temporary storage of storm water. When the technology is up and running in the area it could result in a significant reduction in storm overflow releases at two overflows at Diamond Road and Tankerton Circus in Whitstable.
Southern Water Pathfinder Delivery Lead for Kent, Jon Yates, said:
“Tackling storm overflows is our top priority and I can assure everyone in Whitstable that we’re fully focused on using every tool at our disposal to ensure that storm overflows are significantly reduced.
“We’re doing this through working with partners and creating nature-based and engineering solutions But this work will take time and our focus is to find what works and then scale it up across our region so we can see positive results.”
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Hear how United Utilities is accelerating its investment to reduce spills from storm overflows across the Northwest.