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-   -   Water Companies are Not Fixing massive leaks of water (https://www.thisisbigbrother.com/forums/showthread.php?t=381868)

arista 01-08-2022 06:53 AM

Water Companies are Not Fixing massive leaks of water
 
Yes it Cost Billions
to change the Victorian Pipes


But they must be changed
All water private companies are letting the leaks not
get fixed.


This Stinks.


In the Papers today

Debated on all media.



[England’s water companies are leaking
up to a quarter of their supply a day as
the country faces a drought next month,
an analysis by The Times has found.

The country’s nine water companies
are leaking almost 2.4 billion litres of
water every day while paying their
chief executives large bonuses.


https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/w...-day-hjh7db5l5

Gusto Brunt 01-08-2022 09:00 AM

It doesn't surprise me. There is waste everywhere.

Huge waste.

arista 01-08-2022 11:09 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gusto Brunt (Post 11196646)
It doesn't surprise me. There is waste everywhere.

Huge waste.


Yes they claim it costs too much money to fix the leaks
in the roads and other zones
so they leave them leaking water into the ground.



That must end
Take a Poxy Loan out
and fix the leaks



Digging up the old Victorian
pipes, leaking every second
and putting in Strong Plastic Blue pipes

arista 06-08-2022 02:05 AM

https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/976/cp...ymirror-nc.png

arista 15-08-2022 12:02 AM

BBC Text
["You filthy suds" is the eyecatching headline
for the Daily Star as it reports that experts have
said people can help ease England's drought
by not cleaning their windows and by flushing
their loos less often.
The paper also notes that, despite the situation,
"fatcat water firms" have paid out £3bn to investors.]

https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/976/cp...ar-nc.png.webp

arista 15-08-2022 12:07 AM

BBC TEXT
[The paper says that three days of thunderous downpours
are now forecast after weeks of "tinder-dry weather",
but adds that that could mean flash floods are on the way.]


https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/976/cp...un-nc.png.webp

arista 15-08-2022 03:29 AM

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FaJxnRgX...jpg&name=small

arista 23-06-2023 10:10 AM

BBC News Text:
[Comments by the boss of Thames Water,
saying losses of 630m litres of water per day
are due to "a hot summer and wet winter".]

https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/976/cp...ar-nc.png.webp

Swan 23-06-2023 11:35 AM

I worked for Southern Water for about a year when i was 18 fitting water meters in the ground (i hated it, you were required to fit 5 a day, but some were 25 miles a part, we would start the day at 6:30am driving to the yard, loading/offloading etc, then get home at 7pm, in was relentless. The boss didn't like our gang leader, so he gave us all the sh!t stuff). And i remember leaks were a non stop thing. It would take something like the employment of half the population, digging half the roads 24/7 to fix them all. It's an impossible task basically.

arista 23-06-2023 11:57 AM

"And i remember leaks were a non stop thing."



Yes,
but all the leaks can be stopped.


It will cost Billions
but pay it out

arista 23-06-2023 11:58 AM

Labour's Starmer
needs to Force them to do every repair

bots 23-06-2023 12:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by arista (Post 11303346)
Labour's Starmer
needs to Force them to do every repair

the country can't afford it, and its ordinary people that would foot the bill

Swan 23-06-2023 01:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by arista (Post 11303345)
"And i remember leaks were a non stop thing."



Yes,
but all the leaks can be stopped.


It will cost Billions
but pay it out

Problem is, for every leak you fix, there's another to replace it pretty much daily. There is just no viable way to fix them all. It's never ending.

It's not just that either, we would have to leave some leaks as the dig would require specialist professionals. For example, a couple had just had their drive done, the source of the leak was underneath but it was bricked and patterned. Not something you can just whack the jack hammer on.

arista 23-06-2023 01:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Swan (Post 11303384)
Problem is, for every leak you fix, there's another to replace it pretty much daily. There is just no viable way to fix them all. It's never ending.

It's not just that either, we would have to leave some leaks as the dig would require specialist professionals. For example, a couple had just had their drive done, the source of the leak was underneath but it was bricked and patterned. Not something you can just whack the jack hammer on.


Yes it is a massive Job
Get it started
even if we have the public paying for it.

It is not impossible to do

user104658 23-06-2023 02:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Swan (Post 11303384)
Problem is, for every leak you fix, there's another to replace it pretty much daily. There is just no viable way to fix them all. It's never ending.

It's not just that either, we would have to leave some leaks as the dig would require specialist professionals. For example, a couple had just had their drive done, the source of the leak was underneath but it was bricked and patterned. Not something you can just whack the jack hammer on.

Water company tore up a chunk of our drive (and the pavement and road) not that long ago ... they didn't seem that concerned. To be fair there was water actually seeping out the ground all down the street :joker:.

Also our driveway wasn't pretty in the first place.

BBDodge 23-06-2023 03:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bitontheslide (Post 11303358)
the country can't afford it, and its ordinary people that would foot the bill

We could afford it if we had the right priorities. Water company shareholders have taken £72 billion out of the system since privatisation. The government should force those companies to clean up their mess and their leaks. Cut their profits to pay for it.

arista 23-06-2023 03:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BBDodge (Post 11303430)
We could afford it if we had the right priorities. Water company shareholders have taken £72 billion out of the system since privatisation. The government should force those companies to clean up their mess and their leaks. Cut their profits to pay for it.


Great Points
BBDodge,

Swan 23-06-2023 04:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Soldier Boy (Post 11303419)
Water company tore up a chunk of our drive (and the pavement and road) not that long ago ... they didn't seem that concerned. To be fair there was water actually seeping out the ground all down the street :joker:.

Also our driveway wasn't pretty in the first place.

They would need your permission when i worked for Southern Water, and in at least 50% of cases you'd be financially compensated (not a lot, i cant remember how it worked, but you'd get a check). It may have change now though.


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