River Water monitoring
River Trent pollution kills fish, experts say
Oct 15 2009
The BBC noted that investigations into the cause and source of the chemical leak, which was first discovered on October 6th near Stoke-on-Trent, are ongoing.
It said that the Environment Agency carried out a water quality survey along a 700m section of the river and found almost no evidence of living fish.
However, stocks of the animals located several miles downstream appear to be relatively unaffected by the incident, it noted.
According to the news provider, Severn Trent Water - which is the fourth largest privately-owned water company - said that the cyanide was released into sewers upstream from its sewage treatment plant in Stoke.
The BBC noted that the company was not linked to the chemical leak in any way.
Posted by Claire Manning
Digital Edition
AET 28.4 Oct/Nov 2024
November 2024
Gas Detection - Go from lagging to leading: why investment in gas detection makes sense Air Monitoring - Swirl and vortex meters will aid green hydrogen production - Beyond the Stack: Emi...
View all digital editions
Events
Nov 26 2024 Paris, France
Nov 27 2024 Istanbul, Turkey
H2O Accadueo International Water Exhibition
Nov 27 2024 Bari, Italy
Biogas Convention & Trade Fair 2024
Nov 27 2024 Hanover, Germany
Dec 02 2024 London, UK