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Household toilet troubles a drain on resources for Scottish Water; appeal to residents over what should NOT get flushed down the loo


By Hector MacKenzie

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Wet wipe blockage
Wet wipe blockage

SCOTTISH Water has issued a graphic reminder to flush only the 3Ps – pee, poo and toilet paper– to help keep the country’s sewers free from blockages.

Un-flushable alternatives to toilet paper which are not biodegradable are a major cause of sewer chokes resulting in flooding.

Customers are being asked to help protect the waste water network by sticking to the simple 3Ps guidance and flushing only toilet paper.

Peter Farrer, Scottish Water’s Chief Operating Officer, said: “Alternative un-flushable items such as wet wipes, kitchen roll, cotton wool, tissues or other forms of paper can cause blockages in the pipes. Additional sewer chokes at this time of heightened concern around health could pose additional risk through internal flooding, as well as causing an obviously unpleasant disruption in the home.

“We would urge people to flush only pee, poo and toilet paper in order to reduce the risk of internal sewer flooding. Such blockages are preventable and by following the simple 3Ps guidance together we can ensure the network is fully effective.”

Increases in the number of sewer chokes reported could place extra demand on response teams who are despatched to unblock drains.

Currently Scottish Water responds to around 3000 sewer chokes every month. Around a billion litres of waste water are treated every day in Scotland.

A blocked toilet
A blocked toilet

The waste water drain which goes from a house to the public sewer is usually only about four inches wide, which is around the diameter of a DVD, meaning it can easily become blocked by a build-up of non-flushable materials.

Scottish Water customers can learn more about what they can do to keep the cycle running, what should not be flushed down toilets or poured down sinks and how they can save their drains, protect their homes, their neighbours’ homes and the local environment at www.scottishwater.co.uk/cycle.


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