Secondary lining on the final, easternmost section of London’s super sewer has now passed the 50% mark.
Ofwat has agreed to adjust the licence of Thames Tideway Tunnel, to ensure that the project can be completed after it was severely impacted by the Covid-19 pandemic and historically low interest rates.
Tideway, the company responsible for the design, finance, construction and commissioning of the Thames Tideway Tunnel in London, is undertaking a review to determine where carbon savings could be made if the project was commissioned today.
Tideway, the company building London’s new super sewer, remains on track to deliver the project by 2025, following the most substantial review of the programme since 2018, according to its Interim Report and Financial Statements for the six months ended 30 September 2021 published this morning.
Ofwat has launched a new consultation on proposals to allow Tideway to pass a proportion of increased costs in the order of £200 million from Covid-related impacts on to customers.
The team on Tunnel Boring Machine (TBM) Selina at Chambers Wharf has broken ground on the final 5.5km stretch of the Tideway Tunnel super sewer for London.
The Chief Executive and Chief Operating Officers of Tideway have been paid an extra £349,000 by mistake, according to the company’s Interim Report and Financial Statements for the six months ended 30 September 2020 published yesterday.
Covid19 restrictions have added a further £233 million to previous cost estimates for the Thames Tideway supersewer project, putting the overall cost of the project at £4.133 billion, while completion has been delayed by 9 months.
The final cost of London’s supersewer could be as much as £900 million above the original regulatory baseline of £3.4 billion, rising to £4.3 billion by completion in 2024 in the worst case scenario, according to the 2019-20 Annual Report published by Tideway, the company building the supersewer for Thames Water.
Tunnelling on the the Thames super sewer for London has reached the halfway construction point.
Sulzer has launched a new global Center of Excellence (CoE) for Water Treatment Solutions - the CoE consolidates Sulzer’s wastewater treatment expertise in a unified and global manner.
“SAS (Surplus Activated Sludge) is a bit weird and can do odd things,” says Stuart Chatten, Lead Bioresources Technician at Whitlingham Water Recycling Centre (WRC), one of Anglian Water’s principal centres for processing sewage, serving a population of 400,000.
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.
PureTec Separations, the Ledbury-based water treatment engineering firm, has appointed Dan Norman as its new Sales Manager – Water Process Systems, supporting the company’s continued growth in the UK and international markets.