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March 10, 2011

Theives cause 300 litres oil leak

Thieves are thought to be responsible for approx 300 litres of heating oil fuel to be leaked from a tank at a community centre at Penmorna on the 3rd March.

Damage was caused to a pipe and a valve was found to be open.

Police are urging home owners to be extra vigilant and to make sure that their tanks were secure.

Firefighters from Porthmadog were called to the scene. The oil is believed to have flowed into domestic drains and a water course. There was no risk to members of the public.

Firefighters succeeded in stopping the flow and used environmental spill packs to assist with their work.

February 27, 2011

United Utilities fined £8,000 for diesel spill

Water company, United Utilities, has been fined £8,000 for polluting a river in Blackburn.

They were prosecuted follwing a 2,700-litres diesel spill last year at Fishmoor water treatment works.

Environment Agency visited the site in January 2010 and found pollution to a 1km stretch of Higher Croft Brook near the River Darwen.

Diesel fuel was entering the brook as a result of an incident at the site when a generator had been overfilled and a safety valve failed to close.

It was found that a plug was missing from the generator and if it had been in place the leaked diesel would have been contained.

The water company pleaded guilty at Hyndburn Magistrates Court and was ordered to pay costs of £3,048.

February 4, 2011

Tanker spills kerosene near fishery

A popluar fisheries lake, near Meon in Hampshire, is at risk of severe pollution following after fuel tanker overturned spilling up to 2000 litres of keosene on the 3rd Jan.

 

Firefighters and an Environment Agency pollution team are trying to contain the spill and prevent it from polluting the surrounding water courses.

 

Residents have been notified and several homes may need to be evacuated.

 

The scene of the accident is near to the Meon Spring Fly Fishery lakes which are stocked with rainbow and brown trout.

January 31, 2011

Fuel spill on the M77 near Glasgow

A car collided with the central reservation of the M77 motorway south of Glasgow.

 

The accident happened on the evening of Sunday 30th Jan at approx 5pm and initial reports have suggested more than one vehicle was involved.

 

The crash took place at Junction 1 of the M77 at Dumbreck Road, not far from where it links to the M8 and fuel was spilled on the carriageway. The M77 southbound carriageway was reduced down to one lane.

January 23, 2011

Wildlife haven threatened following an oil leak

A wildlife haven is under threat after oil leaked into an East Riding waterway.

 

A spill at Winestead Drain, near Patrington, is believed to have been caused by leaking oil from the heating system at Withernsea High School which then moved downstream. 

 

A number of wildlife species are under threat, including fish, birds, invertebrates and rodents and the effects of the spill may become worse should the pollutant make it into the food chain.

 

A team from East Riding Council are working to clean up the pollutant in an operation which is expected to take over a week to complete.

 

Jonathan Howell, spokesman for the local authority said, “Following a leak from an oil storage tank that fuels the school heating system, oil has been found in water nearby.  The leaking tank has been emptied and oil removed from the site.  The council is assisting the Environment Agency on behalf of the school. We have appointed a specialist contractor to reduce the levels of contamination within the waterway.  We are currently inspecting all oil storage tanks of a similar nature with a view to preventing future spillages.”

 

Mr Howell was unable to say how much the final clean-up bill would be.

 

He said: “Payment may be the responsibility of the school or possibly the manufacturer of the boiler system. A thorough investigation is taking place.”

 

The Environment Agency has classified the spill as category two, meaning it poses a “significant risk”‘ to plants and wildlife.

 

The Environment Agency representative, Francesca Glyn-Jones, said, “This is a category two spill, so we are taking it very seriously. The clean-up teams have isolated the spill between two pumping stations, so hopefully the damage caused will be minimised by these measures”.

January 22, 2011

Environment Agency helps improve water quality after oil leak

The Environment Agency has helped to improve the water quality of a Welsh estuary following  an oil leak from a wrecked ship.

 

Officers from the Agency were informed that fuel was seen spilling into the Torridge waterway from a derelict dredger, as a  sheen could be seen in the water covering an area over 500 metres.  It was discovered that diesel had been leaking from a fuel tank and carried out a clean-up operation on the estuary to remove the fuel from the water.

 

A spokesman for the Environment Agency, Andrew Leyman, said: “Water entered the hull causing a quantity of diesel to spill into the surrounding estuary.”  They managed to recover more than 100 gallons of diesel from the dredger, as well as clean up the surrounding areas.

 

Mr Leyman continued: “Owners should check vessels and, if necessary, remove any surplus fuel if the craft is left on the foreshore for long periods of time.”

 

This comes after Environment Agency Wales warned people to check their heating oil tanks, as rising temperatures after a long period of cold weather could cause leaks, which may then affect water quality if the fuel spills into nearby rivers.

August 3, 2010

Environmental firm caught polluting water system

A company created to help the environment by producing an alternative fuel source allowed polluting oils to seep into the water system in Birmingham, a court heard.

Arshad Mehmood, the owner of Britannia Biodiesel Oils, admitted disposing of waste oils in a manner likely to cause pollution to the environment.

Nicholas Cole, prosecuting at Birmingham Crown Court for the Environment Agency, said in March 2007, as part of a survey, it was discovered that an oily white substance was being discharged into Washwood Heath Brook, an inner-city watercourse which had also been polluted from other sources.

The discharge was traced through a drain back to a manhole cover outside the defendant’s biodiesel plant in Cherrywood Road, Bordesley Green.

Mr Cole said the plant took waste oils from premises such as restaurants and fish and chip shops and turned them into a biodiesel product which could be used by motorists.

It was discovered there was an open drain at the plant and that there were inadequate safeguards to prevent any spillages going down the drain and polluting watercourses.

Mr Cole said during a further inspection it was noted that a metal tray had been placed loosely over the drain.

Timothy Pole, defending, said Mehmood, aged 43, of Hazelmere Road, Hall Green, had been part of an “explosion” of people who had recently become involved in the business of making alternative energy sources.

However, he had not made any profit out of it and had subsequently sold his business.

It had not been pointed out how imperative it was he should deal with the open drain immediately and that the offence was committed out of ignorance.

August 3, 2010

Welsh rivers polluted by oil spill

HUNDREDS of litres of diesel have leaked into two West Wales rivers.

Environment Agency officers are investigating the suspected red diesel spill following reports of oil swimming on the surface of rivers Clettwr and Teifi, near Llandysul. Officers have already identified the source of the spill as a nearby red diesel storage tank. It is believed that approximately 200-300 litres of oil have leaked from the store.

The pollution has been stopped at source and specialist equipment used to absorb as much of the diesel as possible.

Specialist contractors have been deployed on both rivers to clean up the affected areas.

Ceredigion council has been notified in case of any public health concerns. An Environment Agency Wales officer said the main priority was to identify and stop the pollution at source and to stop any more of the pollutant getting into local rivers.

“We have now done this so the next step is to clear up as much as possible,” he said.

“The biggest problem with this kind of pollutant is that it looks and smells unpleasant for people. It has a limited effect on local wildlife but we are monitoring the area very closely.”

June 20, 2010

HazardEx – News

HazardEx – News.

Following a two month trial, one of the biggest of its kind in British legal history, three companies are facing huge fines after being convicted of involvement in the Buncefield disaster. On the 18th June, a jury at St Albans’ Crown Court found TAV Engineering guilty of failing to protect workers and members of the public following an investigation into the explosion and fire at Buncefield Oil Storage Depot on 11 December 2005.

Motherwell Control Systems was found guilty of the same charge on the 16th June. Both TAV Engineering and Motherwell Control had pleaded not guilty

Also this week, Hertfordshire Oil Storage Limited (HOSL) was found guilty of failing to prevent major accidents and limit their effects. HOSL also pleaded guilty to causing pollution to enter controlled waters underlying the vicinity around Buncefield contrary to the Water Resources Act.

Total UK has previously admitted three health and safety breaches in connection with the explosion, while the British Pipeline Agency had also admitted two charges.

The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) and Environment Agency are the ‘Competent Authority’ responsible for regulating non-nuclear major hazardous industrial sites in the UK under the Control of Major Accident Hazard Regulations 1999 (COMAH). As the competent authority, the Health and Safety Executive and Environment Agency have a responsibility to investigate major incidents and ensure that lessons are learned.

The Health & Safety Executive and the Environment Agency said: “This was the biggest and most complex criminal inquiry we have worked on together – the product of many hundreds of hours of painstaking forensic investigation.

“When companies put workers and members of the public at risk and cause environmental damage we will prosecute.

“When the largest fire in peacetime Europe tore through the Buncefield site on that Sunday morning in December 2005, these companies had failed to protect workers, members of the public and the environment.

“The scale of the explosion and fire at Buncefield was immense and it was miraculous that nobody died. Unless the high hazard industries truly learn the lessons, then we may not be that fortunate in future.”

The destruction at the Hertfordshire depot came after a massive vapour cloud ignited when 250,000 litres of petrol leaked from one of its tanks. The blast, widely thought to be the largest explosion in peacetime Europe, measured 2.4 on the Richter scale and could be heard 125 miles away.

During the trial, which started on 15th April, jurors were told that the environmental damage caused was still not known but could last for decades.

Sentencing is due to take place on 16th July, when the companies will face unlimited fines.

June 14, 2010

Using Generators and Plant Equipment Outdoors

The Amazing Plant Nappy
The Amazing Plant Nappy

When using plant or generators outside one of the biggest problems is fuel or oil leaks and drips. The main problem with fuel is when the user is refilling the tank and with oil it is from worn seals and from hydraulic lines. With small generators you can place the machine in a tray to catch any potential leaks and drips, but with larger machines it can be a problem. You could a tray under any leak but a major problem will be when it rains, it is going to fill with water and then you have to dispose of oily water safely and in accordance with local laws and regulations.

 

It would be great if you could just put the machine onto something that would absorb and hold any fuels and oils and it didn’t matter if it got rained on, something that wouldn’t fill up with water and then overflow with all the oils or fuels then being spilled onto the ground – the very thing you were trying to prevent…… well now there is……….

The Plant Nappy……….

 

Plant Nappy® provides spill and leak containment for small plant equipment. It is a lightweight, user-friendly means of spill containment. Plant Nappy® is the easy and cost-effective solution to ensuring environmentally friendly practise and avoiding potential prosecution or fine for pollution of ground or water.

 

Plant Nappy® protects the ground underneath:

• Generators
• Compressors
• Bowsers
• Mixers
• Hydraulic Equipment
• Pumps

 

Plant Nappy® can be used on uneven ground and even slight inclines without a loss in performance, ensuring your company is always protected. It is ideal for use in situations where mobile power generation is required:

• Construction Sites
• Pumping Operations
• Refuelling
• Roadworks
• Mobile lighting
• Telecoms Repair
• Outdoor Events
• Outdoor Catering

 

Available in 3 Sizes and there are also additional accessories such as secondary protective inserts and drip pads

 

Click here to view the product range.

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