Yorkshire Water to Invest over £300m in Water Infrastructure
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network in Business
Yorkshire Water will invest over £300m this financial year throughout the region with several projects in South Yorkshire designed to improve the area’s water and waste water infrastructure.
By STEPHANIE BATEMAN
Image source: Yorkshire Water
Projects in the pipeline include a £24m scheme at Rivelin water treatment works to improve drinking water quality for customers in Sheffield which is anticipated to complete in late 2018.
In Barnsley, £20m has been allocated to Lundwood sewage treatment works to improve the final effluent quality and ammonia levels in the River Dearne as part of an effort to improve river water quality. The natural environment will also be protected, with a fish pass ‘super highway’ at Langsett reservoir near Stocksbridge nearing completion.
This will enable trout to travel upstream to breeding grounds in the upper reaches of Little Don River deep in the Peak District. It represents the first phase of a much wider programme of work which will see a total of 14 new fish passes built across the region between now and 2020.
Across Yorkshire, there is an underground labyrinth of water pipes and sewers that stretch for 83,000km, which could travel around the Earth twice. Significant investment is required to keep the underground network operating to high standards.
Read full article: The Star
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- Water Supply
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- Water Utility
- Infrastructure
- Urban Water Infrastructure
- Utility Management
- Infrastructure Management