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a Thames Water sewer supervisor unblocks a sewer in central London.
‘Most still people don’t know that baby wipes contain plastic’: a Thames Water supervisor unblocks a sewer in central London. Photograph: Adrian Dennis/AFP/Getty Images
‘Most still people don’t know that baby wipes contain plastic’: a Thames Water supervisor unblocks a sewer in central London. Photograph: Adrian Dennis/AFP/Getty Images

Wet wipes make up 93% of matter causing UK sewer blockages

This article is more than 6 years old

City to Sea campaign says we must rethink bad habits and only flush ‘three Ps: pee, paper and poo’ as study finds blockages cost UK £100m a year

Baby wipes are causing hundreds of thousands of blockages in the UK sewer system and costing the country £100m every year, according to a new report.

The study from Water UK, the trade body representing all of the main water and sewerage companies in the country, found that wipes made up about 93% of the material causing the sewer blockages.

Water UK’s director of corporate affairs, Rae Stewart, said the findings proved that sewer blockages that cost £100m a year are “a problem we can all do something about”.

“There are things that water companies can do, such as improve education about what should and shouldn’t be flushed. There are things manufacturers can do, such as make labelling clearer on non-flushable products. And, of course, there are things individuals can do – which is bin the wipes rather than flush them.”

The report said there are approximately 300,000 sewer blockages every year, costing the country £100m – money which Water UK says could be taken off bills or spent on improving services.

Earlier this year a fatberg weighing the same as 11 double decker buses and stretching the length of two football pitches was found blocking a section of the sewer system in east London.

Natalie Fee, from the plastic pollution campaign group City to Sea which has been running a campaign about not flushing wipes and other single-use plastic down the toilet, said people should rethink their flushing habits and only flush “the three Ps: pee, paper and poo”.

Fee also called on manufacturers to do more to label wipes properly. “Most people still don’t know that baby wipes contain plastic, and they would be a lot less likely to flush them if it was listed as an ingredient on the pack.”

More on this story

More on this story

  • EU agrees to ban exports of waste plastic to poor countries

  • ‘Waste colonialism’: world grapples with west’s unwanted plastic

  • Latin America urges US to reduce plastic waste exports to region

  • Takeaway food and drink litter dominates ocean plastic, study shows

  • Turkey to ban plastic waste imports

  • Twenty firms produce 55% of world’s plastic waste, report reveals

  • UK plastics sent for recycling in Turkey dumped and burned, Greenpeace finds

  • It’s on our plates and in our poo, but are microplastics a health risk?

  • Scientists find way to remove polluting microplastics with bacteria

  • ‘Single-use plastics’ to be phased out in Australia from 2025 include plastic utensils and straws

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