£100 million contract signed for new Severn Trent water treatment works at Church Wilne

Severn Trent, as part of its £566 million Green Recovery Programme, has signed a £100m contract with MWH Treatment to build a state-of-the-art water treatment facility.

The new facility, called Witches Oak Water Treatment Works, will be built near to its existing Church Wilne site in Derbyshire.

It is the highest value contract for an individual project Severn Trent has signed in AMP7.

The new water treatment works will help provide up to an additional 89 million litres of drinking water per day to the region and will use innovative ceramic membrane technology provided by Nijhuis Saur Industries, that is currently in use in only one other large-scale treatment works in the country.

The project will also see Severn Trent pre-treat water by using floating wetlands – this will help provide a more sustainable and nature-based treatment process whilst also bringing significant improvements in biodiversity.

Chris Wand, Green Recovery Programme Director at Severn Trent said:

“We’re delighted to work with MWH Treatment on this project, working collaboratively and delivering solutions to ensure our customers have a reliable water supply during the longer, hotter and drier summers we’ve been experiencing.

“While it is still important to save water and look after our natural resources, this project will also be less carbon intensive than other traditional solutions. We’re looking forward to completing the build of this wonderful facility at Church Wilne and seeing the positive impact it will have for customers across our region.”

Richard Thomson, the Project Director at MWH Treatment for Witches Oak Water Treatment Works, said:

“MWH Treatment is excited to work with long-term client Severn Trent on a project which will deliver crucial water security for approximately 224,000 households.

“A project such as this requires an investment in innovation and a commitment to real collaboration to ensure the project thoroughly integrates design and construction to the highest health and safety standards across the projects supply chain. We will facilitate this collaborative innovation by applying our Digital Delivery Tools including digital surveying, interactive visualisations, intelligent 3D models, rehearsals, and digital field management.”

The site is expected to be completed by 2025.

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