A £240,000 investment to boost protection of Exmoor National Park is underway

Efforts to protect the precious environment within one of southern England’s most beautiful open spaces will step up a gear with investment worth nearly a quarter of a million pounds this autumn.

Lasting just over a month, the scheme is aiming to restore the integrity of nearly two kilometres of the sewer system within Exmoor National Park and will take place from the middle of August.

The £240,000 project will see Wessex Water teams working mainly in fields near the village of Timberscombe within Exmoor – which was designated as a National Park in the 1950s. Specialist equipment will work deep underground to help complete the sewer repairs and reduce disruption.

More than 1800 metres of pipes will be relined to prevent both foul water escaping and polluting the environment and groundwater infiltration, which can overwhelm the system and lead to the automatic operation of storm overflows.

Most of the repairs will be carried out using ‘no-dig’ techniques, which are quicker and less intrusive than replacing the pipe in a conventional manner.

It continues Wessex Water’s hefty investment in environmental protection in west Somerset, the company having separately announced more than £12 million of improvements to two water recycling centres near the villages of Milverton and Bishop’s Lydeard to reduce chemicals and pollutants from the arriving sewer flows and the discharge of untreated wastewater into watercourses before January 2025.

Wessex Water project manager Daniel Kelly said of the Exmoor work:

“Relining pipes in this way ensures the resilience of our sewer system can be maintained while preventing pollution from damaged pipes and we reduce disruption on local communities as much as possible by using the ‘no-dig’ methods.

“It continues our hefty ongoing investment in the sewer system, spending more than £2 million this summer alone relining nearly 7,500 metres of sewers throughout our region.

“This scheme is taking place mainly within fields in a rural area but we’re writing to customers nearby to ensure they are aware of the project and where there is an impact on local roads, an inconvenience for which we apologise.’’

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