Friday, October 22, 2021

UK
Here’s every Tory who voted against stopping sewage dumping in rivers

The House of Lords amendment sought to prevent companies discharging raw sewage in rivers. It was rejected.

 by Henry Goodwin
2021-10-22 12:26



The Tories have rejected efforts to place a legal duty on water companies to reduce raw sewage discharges into rivers.

MPs debated the environment bill on Wednesday, after clean water campaigners urged them to back a key amendment on sewage that had been agreed in the House of Lords.

Raw sewage was discharged into waters more than 400,000 times in 2020, over a total of more than 3.1 million hours.


The bill will govern environmental policy, from rivers to air, after Britain’s departure from the EU. Campaign group Surfers Against Sewage had pushed for an amendment to tackle sewage pollution to be accepted by MPs.

But George Eustice, the environment secretary, recommended that MPs reject the proposal – and it was voted down on Wednesday night.

But Boris Johnson could face an embarrassing rebellion ahead of COP26, after many of his own MPs voted to stop water companies dumping raw sewage into rivers.

The amendment – which sought to “place a duty on water companies to ensure that untreated sewage is not discharged into rivers and other inland waters” – won support from 22 Conservative MPs including nine ex-ministers and six current select committee chairman.

Speaking ahead of the vote, Hugo Tagholm, of Surfers Against Sewage, said: “In this most important of environmental decades, it’s shocking that the government is recommending that MPs reject progressive and ambitious amendments that would protect water, air and nature.

“Why wouldn’t they want water companies to have a legal obligation not to pollute our rivers and ocean with sewage, for example?

“It beggars belief and hardly shows a commitment to be the greenest government ever. It’s time for more ambitious thinking and law that builds protected nature back into public ownership rather than leaving it to the ravages of shareholder interests.”


Despite some abstentions, 265 Conservative MPs voted down the Lords amendment. They were:

CLICK HERE TO SEE THE WHOLE LIST OF 265

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