Advertisement

Warning over taking dip in Thames as poll shows most think it is safe

More than half of Londoners think the Thames is safe to swim in, despite millions of tonnes of sewage entering the river each year, a survey suggests.

Former Love Island contestant and engineer Wes Nelson has teamed up with Tideway, the company building a “super sewer” under London to help clean up the Thames, to urge people not to be tempted to take a dip in the river.

It comes as a poll of 1,000 residents revealed that 55% think the river, or at least parts of it, is safe to swim in, and a fifth (21%) would rather swim in the Thames than a public pool in light of the current pandemic.

The survey shows that 45% would be likely to take a dip to cool off in a heatwave.

Thames Tideway Tunnel
Wes Nelson meets apprentice civil engineer Kayla Browne during a visit to Tideway’s new ‘super sewer’ in Fulham, south-west London (Matt Alexander/PA)

While they are aware that sewage is found in the river, Londoners generally significantly under-estimate how much flows into its waters each year, the poll by Opinium for Tideway suggests.

Around four-fifths of those questioned (81%) said up to a million tonnes of sewage is entering the river each year.

Though the river is in much better shape than it was in the 1950s, when it was declared “biologically dead” due to pollution, 39 million tonnes of sewage is still flowing into the river each year before work on the super sewer started.

London’s Victorian drainage system – built for a much smaller population in the capital than today’s nearly nine million residents – regularly overflows, with untreated sewage spilling into the Thames, Tideway said.

Th 15.5 miles (25km) of sewer tunnel running under central London will capture and convey most of the raw sewage and rainwater that currently overflows into the river away for treatment.

Some 10 miles (16km) of the Thames Tideway Tunnel has been excavated and the project is due to be completed in 2024, the team behind the scheme said.

The current pollution in the river does not only put people’s health at risk if they swim in the water, but also harms wildlife.

Mr Nelson, a trained engineer who attempted to swim the English Channel as part of C4’s Sink Or Swim team, said: “Swimming in the Thames is dangerous on so many levels.

“It’s not just the sewage people should be aware of, but the tides, currents and water traffic too.

“The RNLI’s two busiest lifeboat stations aren’t on the coast – they’re on the Thames, rescuing people from the water in central London.”

Kayla Browne, apprentice civil engineer at Tideway’s Carnwath Road site in Fulham, south-west London, said: “If you’re considering swimming in the river, don’t do it. Think about what you put down your toilet – that is essentially what you’d be swimming in.

“It may be hard to believe, but, until the tunnel is built, we’re treating the river like a toilet.

“Sewage flows directly into the Thames when it rains, as this is the only way to stop homes and streets from flooding when the existing Victorian sewers overflow.”