Today, 15 major environmental charities and amenity groups representing over 5 million people have come together in a unique coalition in support of proposals to construct the Thames Tunnel to end the scandal of 39 million tonnes of untreated sewage which enters the capital's river every year. Please see below the joint statement agreed by the Thames Tunnel Now partners, including RSPB, WWF, Thames21, Angling Trust and London Wildlife Trust.
 Support the  Thames Tunnel Now!
Support the  Thames Tunnel Now!
 A coalition of national and local organisations has called for MPs and local  councils to support the construction of a new tunnel under the Thames which  will stop tens of millions of tonnes of sewage overflowing into London's river  each year. The tunnel proposal, which is the result of more than ten years of  exhaustive research and development by Thames Water and the Environment Agency,  is the only viable solution to dealing with "London's dirty secret":  when as little as 2mm of rain falls in the capital, the sewers overflow into  the river.
  
  David Walliams fell ill recently while swimming the length of the river as a  result of swallowing river water. Thousands of people use the river for rowing,  angling, sailing and canoeing. Many walkers and cyclists use the towpath, and  adults and children go on to the foreshore where sewage is deposited. Many  thousands more would be encouraged to make use of London's greatest natural  asset if it were not routinely polluted with sewage from London's population  which has grown from 2.5 million in 1865 when the sewers were built to 8  million today.
  
  Sewage overflows in the summer are particularly damaging to wildlife in the  river, which supports a wide range of freshwater and marine fish. The Thames  has been described as a wildlife superhighway through the capital and is an  important nursery area for millions bass and flounder - very important  commercial and recreational angling fish species. Every time there is a major  overflow of sewage, tens of thousands of these fish die, damaging the fragile  eco-system.
  
  It is a large  scale problem which requires a large scale solution for the capital for at  least the next 120 years. It will cost £3.6 billion, and will be paid for by  Thames Water customers; each household will pay £60-65 extra a year, with bills  starting to rise in 2013. Thames Water bills are currently among the lowest in  the country and the new higher rates will still be lower than many other water  companies' in the UK. Construction of the tunnel will create 4,000 direct jobs  and many more associated jobs as well as a clean and healthy tidal river which  could support many thousands more employment opportunities in recreation,  leisure and tourism industries of the future.
  
  A  spokesperson for the coalition said:
  
  "It is completely  unacceptable for people to be faced with raw sewage in one of the most  sophisticated cities in the world, and for tens of thousands of fish to die  from suffocation every time it rains heavily in the summer. Opponents of the  scheme should ask themselves if they would like their child to go sailing or  fishing among human faeces, sanitary towels and condoms, or if they would like  a healthy river full of wildlife for millions of people to enjoy for  generations to come. We call on the Thames Tunnel Now Coalition's collective  membership to encourage their MPs and London local authorities to support this  pioneering project - which is the only real option for a clean Thames - today."
  
The scheme  faces opposition from a small but vocal group of local authorities who have  raised concerns about the construction sites and other essential temporary  infrastructure. As a result, they are likely to oppose the whole basis for the  scheme during the second phase of a major public consultation process which  will be launched on Friday 4th November, and threaten to create costly delays  to the implementation of the scheme. Delay means continuing the harm heaped  onto the capital's environment.
  
  Source: Angling Trust Fishing News
  
  
  
  
  
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