Source: Thames Anglers’ Conservancy (TAC)

This new pollution incident was reported after local people saw dead fish floating in the river on Friday 05 October and reported the river turning black and emitting an acrid smell.

The Crane was still recovering following a pollution incident in 2011 when an infrastructure failure during routine maintenance by Thames Water near Heathrow saw a Tsunami of raw sewage pour down the river, killing all life in a seven mile stretch. During that incident an estimated 10,000 fish were killed including mature barbel, roach, chub, pike and perch.

In July 2012 members of the Thames Anglers’ Conservancy sampled several areas for invertebrate life and found that they had returned in abundance, this in part was due to the spring floods cleansing much of the remaining sewage sediment from the river. Then in December 2012 the Environment Agency began the first of a long-term restocking program with 5500 fish going in to restore some of the stocks that had been lost. In recent months anglers had started returning to the river and reported the fish population as healthy and thriving

The TAC believe believe that there has been a complete fish kill below the source of the pollution.The TAC extensively walked and visually surveyed the river in the two days following the latest incident and believe that there has been a complete fish kill below the source of the pollution. No live fish were observed, only the remains of a once healthy and recovering population could be seen littering the banks and riverbed. The true number may never been known but will run into many thousands when considering the fry that were seen.

 
David Harvey, Chairman of the Thames Anglers’ Conservancy, said:

“This is a devastating blow to the river, quite unbelievable it has happened again and with the same severity, it’s almost surreal. We have been involved since the original incident in 2011 and with others secured £400,000 from Thames Water towards the full restoration of the Crane and to improve the robustness against it ever happening again. Now we have seen it happen again. We fear that all the fish have been lost along with those that had naturally recruited from the upper reaches.

Many questions need to be answered, we hear that the pollution may have started as early as Wednesday, was it reported and how did the authorities respond? There is still a distinct lack of water quality monitoring stations on the Crane, the early warning of any incidents, why two years on are not more controls in place?

In the 21st century how can it be that our rivers are still the default position for any outfalls, any road run off, where is the protection that they need. I am tired of seeing plans which will never deal with the real problem of outdated and antiquated infrastructure where we are living in the dark ages. It just seems a question of where next, every river is under threat. We need action, we need criminal prosecutions that produce fines that are a real deterrent.”

For the full story and images visit the TAC website.