As well as delivering safe, clean and reliable water to you, we also need to take it away once you’ve used it. When you empty the bath, flush the toilet or use your washing machine, it’s our job to make sure that all that used water – what we call wastewater – is treated and returned safely into rivers.
In some areas, including central London, surface water and sewage mix together before being treated at our sewage works.
We manage over 68,000 miles of sewers, 5,235 pumping stations and 1.48 million manholes across our region.
Whenever you flush the toilet or empty the sink, the wastewater goes down the drain and into a pipe, which takes it to a larger sewer pipe under the road. The sewer then joins our network of other sewers and takes the wastewater to a sewage treatment works.
At the sewage works, we pass the wastewater through several cleaning and filtering processes so that we can return it safely into rivers.
First, we remove large objects that may block or damage equipment or pollute our rivers. This includes items that should never have been put down the drain in the first place, such as nappies, wet wipes, sanitary items and cotton buds, and sometimes even things like bricks, bottles and rags.
We then use special equipment to filter out grit, as this often washes into the sewer with wastewater.
Wastewater still contains organic solid matter – otherwise known as human waste. We separate the waste from the water by putting it into large settlement tanks, where solids sink to the bottom. We call the settled solids ‘sludge’. Large arms or scrapers help to push the sludge towards the centre, where it’s then pumped away for further treatment.
The cleaner water passes over a wall near the top of the tank ready for the next stage of the treatment process.
Although we’ve removed the visible bits of sludge, we need to take out some of the smaller and sometimes invisible organisms as well.
At our larger sewage treatment works, we put the wastewater into rectangular tanks called ‘aeration lanes’, which pump air into the water. This encourages the useful bacteria to break down and eat the harmful bacteria. The more the useful bacteria eat, the more they grow and multiply, until all the nasty bugs have gone.
We pass the treated wastewater through a final settlement tank, where the useful bacteria sink to the bottom. This forms more sludge, which we recycle back to the secondary treatment stage.
The clean water then passes over a wall near the top of the tank.
At this point, we may need to carry out one additional treatment – filtering the water slowly through a bed of sand, which catches any remaining particles.
We treat the sludge we collect at the start of the process so that we can put it to good use. We recycle most of it to agricultural land for farmers to use as fertiliser, but we also use it to generate energy. We do this in several different ways:
Once the wastewater is clean, we can return it safely to local rivers and streams. Putting clean water back into the river is very important, as it helps to keep water flowing and wildlife thriving.
The Environment Agency strictly regulates the quality of the cleaned wastewater, and we test it to make sure that it meets their high-quality standards.
The ‘sludge cake’ which remains after the energy production is put to good use. We recycle it to agricultural land for farmers to use as fertiliser.