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Rother River Basin Catchment

We've developed the first Drainage and Wastewater Management Plan (DWMP) for the Rother River Basin Catchment.

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1. Overview for the Rother River Basin Catchment

Our DWMP sets out our priorities for the Rother River Basin Catchment.

  • Reducing the number of spills from the 80 storm overflows which together currently spill around 2,200 times per annum.
  • Separating or attenuating excess rainwater in the sewer networks to reduce the risks of flooding and frequency of storm overflow discharges, especially in Hawkhurst, Wadhurst, Battle and Northiam.
  • Reducing nutrient discharges from the WTWs across the river basin to prevent deterioration of the internationally designated habitat sites.
  • A catchment-wide partnership scheme to divert surface water away from the cliffs at Fairlight.
  • Improving the resilience of our networks and treatment works to prevent pollution incidents, particularly in Rye and Fairlight.

Across the Rother Catchment we have:

All the stages we followed in developing the DWMP for the Rother are set out in the subsections below.

56

Sewerage catchments

1,349

Kilometres of sewers

56

Wastewater Treatment Works

212

Wastewater Pumping Stations

7%

The percentage of the region connected to a mains sewer

89%

The percentage of homes connected to a mains sewer

82%

The percentage of businesses to a mains sewer

Across the Rother Catchment we have:

All the stages we followed in developing the DWMP for the Rother are set out in the subsections below.

56

Sewerage catchments

1,349

Kilometres of sewers

56

Wastewater Treatment Works

212

Wastewater Pumping Stations

7%

The percentage of the region connected to a mains sewer

89%

The percentage of homes connected to a mains sewer

82%

The percentage of businesses to a mains sewer

3. Working with others

We've worked with a wide range of organisations with responsibilities for drainage, flooding and protection of the environment while developing our DWMP. The organisations we worked with in the Rother River Basin Catchment include:

  • East Sussex County Council
  • Kent County Council
  • Romney Marsh Area Internal Drainage Board
  • Folkestone and Hythe District Council
  • Rother District Council
  • The Environment Agency
  • The Rother and Romney Catchment Partnership and member organisations including:
    • Kent Wildlife Trust
    • High Weald Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty

Working together to co-create the DWMP is important. Our drainage and wastewater systems are often interconnected with the systems managed and operated by others and affect the natural environments within the catchment.

A wide range of issues and concerns have been raised and discussed throughout the development of the DWMP for the Rother Catchment. We're progressing these issues through the development of the DWMP as set out in our investment needs for the Rother. Furthermore, we commit to working with others to co-develop and co-deliver schemes that meet multi-organisational objectives and which benefit the environment, our customers and communities.

We developed and ran a series of activities between 2020 and 2022 as we prepared our DWMP for the Rother. You can view the dates and purpose of the various webinars, workshops, and meetings on individual wastewater systems and our interim consultation below.

The regionally-based webinars presented and discussed issues and information relevant across the whole of our operating region. You can view the presentations used in the webinars on our Who we’re working with page.

 

Workshop 1
Held in September 2020, participants discussed the findings of the risk based catchment screening (RBCS) and proposed additional planning objectives for the DWMP. Workshop slides.

 

Workshop 2
Held in May 2021, participants:

  1. discussed the results from the BRAVA risk assessments and the proposed investment strategy for the wastewater catchments within the Rother Catchment
  2. identified the generic options that should be explored to address the identified risks, and
  3. discussed which wastewater catchments to progress through the Options Development and Appraisal stage of the DWMP. Workshop slides.

Workshop 3
Held in March 2022, we reviewed and discussed the draft investment programme for the Rother River Basin Catchment. This included the types of investment, priorities and timings for investment needs and the wider opportunities arising from the proposed investment in terms of partnership projects and catchment-wide solutions providing multiple benefits. Workshop slides.

You can also view the findings from our interim consultation.

4. Risk based catchment screening for the Rother Catchment

Risk based catchment screening (RBCS) is a process that uses existing, readily available data. This helps us identify where there's a current and/or potential risk or vulnerability in the sewer catchment to future changes, such as new residential development or changes in climate. This enables effort to be focused on these catchments during the development of the DWMP in order to understand these risks in more detail and why they're likely to occur.

The RBCS involves the assessment of each sewer catchment against 17 indicators set out in guidance published by Water UK. Water companies can add additional indicators to ensure that other important issues are highlighted at this early stage in the development of the DWMPs. We've included an additional metric on customer complaints as this provides a flag for catchments with ongoing or outstanding concerns.

Find out more about the risk based catchment screening process.

You can download the results for the RBCS for the Rother River Basin Catchment below.

Download the RCBS for the Rother Catchment

5. BRAVA for the Rother Catchment

The Baseline Risk and Vulnerability Assessment (BRAVA) is an important step in the development of our DWMP. It helps us to understand current system performance and future vulnerabilities. This means that we can identify the investment needed to manage and reduce the risks to band 0 (no significant level of risk).

A BRAVA assessment has been completed for each of the wastewater systems in the Rother Catchment that were flagged during the RBCS. A risk assessment is completed for all 14 planning objectives.

The output of the BRAVA shows:

  • the current risks and issues in each wastewater system within the Rother Catchment – providing a baseline from which we can assess future risks
  • the future risks in 2030, 2035, 2045 and 2050 (where the methodology currently allows us to assess the future risks) so we can understand how the current risks may change without additional investment
  • the key issues behind the future changes in risk, including:
    • a deterioration in the condition of our wastewater systems
    • climate change – including the increasing frequency and severity of droughts and storms
    • growth and urban creep
    • a combination of any or all of these that are relevant in the catchment being assessed.

You can download the BRAVA results for the Rother River Basin Catchment below.

Download the BRAVA summary for the Rother Catchment

Notes

  1. In the BRAVA results table, “not flagged” means no risks were identified in the initial RBCS using the nationally set criteria. Wastewater systems not flagged were screened out and did not progress to the BRAVA stage. “Not applicable” means the planning objective wasn't relevant within the wastewater system. For example, where a system has no storm overflows, this will be marked as “Not applicable”.
  2. Please check the DWMP glossary for any unexplained acronyms.

6. Problem Characterisation

The Problem Characterisation stage of the DWMP uses the results from the Baseline Risk and Vulnerability Assessment (BRAVA) to explore the causes of risks and the primary drivers. A technical summary provides information on our approach to the Problem Characterisation stage.

Current risks in the Rother Catchment

The graph below illustrates the combined results of the 2020 BRAVA assessment for all 56 wastewater systems in the Rother River Basin Catchment. It shows how many wastewater systems have a risk under each of the 14 planning objectives. For example, for the risk of internal flooding, 50 wastewater systems are in band 0 (not significant), none are in band 1 (moderately significant), four are in band 2 (very significant) and two were ‘not flagged’ for inclusion (i.e. screened out at the RBCS of the DWMP).

This graph illustrates that nutrients, pollution, storm overflows and good ecological status/potential are the main concerns in this river basin. This is illustrated by the brown bars being the highest for planning objectives 2, 5, 9 and 11.

The wastewater systems with the highest number of planning objectives in band 2 (very significant) are Rye and Fairlight, each with five objectives in band 2. Camber, Quickbourne Lane Northam, Robertsbridge and Ticehurst each have four band 2 risks. Dymchurch, Guestling Green, Iden, New Romney, Sedlescombe, Tenterden and Woodchurch have three planning objectives in band 2. All other wastewater systems have fewer risks.

The specific risks and the causes of risk for each of the wastewater systems are explained in the summary of the problem characterisation for each system. These are available to download from the link next to the name of each system in the table below.

Future risks in the Rother Catchment

The 2050 BRAVA results help us to identify the future challenges for drainage and wastewater management in the Rother River Basin Catchment.

(a) Growth

There are several wastewater catchments where new homes, businesses, roads and other infrastructure are planned. The main areas identified for potential new development in the Rother Catchment are:

  • Tenterden
  • Hythe

The BRAVA results show that the additional homes and businesses will increase the risks of non-compliance with our Dry Weather Flow (DWF) permits from the Environment Agency in 11 of the 56 wastewater systems. This includes Rye, Lydd, Ticehurst, Hawkhurst North, Westfield, Hawkhurst South, Hamstreet and Woodchurch. This means further investment will be needed in the future to increase the capacity of our treatment works to accommodate the new homes and businesses.

The additional development may mean that our current permits for wastewater treatment quality might be exceeded by 2050 without further investment in 11 wastewater systems, including Lydd, Quickbourne Lane Northiam, Guestling Green and Wittersham.

New development in the Rother Catchment might put additional pressure on internationally designated habitat sites such as Dungeness, Romney Marsh and Rye Bay. So, solutions will need to be found to ensure that development is nutrient neutral.

A map of the Rother Catchment showing the estimated future growth in each wastewater system is shown below. The technical summary explains how we've considered population growth and urban creep in our DWMP.

(b) Climate change

Climate change will bring greater variability of our weather with warmer wetter winters and hotter drier summers. As a result, we could be seeing more intense summer storms that exceed the capacity of the drainage and wastewater networks and cause localised flooding. Hence, the risk of flooding from sewer systems is increasing due to climate change. The technical summary explains how we've considered climate change in our DWMP.

We'll work with partner organisations, such as East Sussex County Council and the Environment Agency, who have responsibility for flooding and drainage, to consider options and develop opportunities to find solutions that reduce the risks from flooding.

We'll need to adapt our wastewater systems to operate in future climates. There will be an increasing need to slow the flow entering our sewer networks so the systems can carry the water without flooding homes and businesses and/or without causing discharges from storm overflows. Preventing additional rainfall from entering foul sewer networks, including combined sewer networks where possible, could delay the need to upgrade and enlarge the vast underground network of sewers.

Climate change is expected to have an impact on the risk of flooding in several wastewater systems, especially Tenterden, Rye, Camber, Robertsbridge, Hamstreet, Fairlight and Woodchurch. The flooding risk will increase by 2050 unless measures are taken to manage and reduce these risks. The risk of storm overflow discharges is forecast to increase for several wastewater systems including New Romney and Meres Farm Mayfield. However, the BRAVA results indicate that 10 systems already have a very significant risk of discharges from storm overflows.

The map below shows the potential impact of climate change, urban creep and growth on the risk of flooding in a 1-in-20-year storm for the wastewater systems. We followed Water UK’s capacity assessment framework to apply a 20% uplift to rainfall forecasts to assess the potential increases in flood volumes shown on the map. The Hythe wastewater system is shaded in red, indicating that over 1,000 properties could be at risk from sewer flooding by 2050. The flood volumes in Hythe could increase from 1,249m3 in 2020 to 2,485m3 by 2050.

Urban creep was estimated using the approach developed by the UK Water Industry Research (UKWIR) report on Urban Creep in sewerage systems (2010).

The map highlights that we'll need to adapt to climate change. Adaptation will mean considering long-term sustainable options, such as reducing the volume of rainwater entering the sewer network. This approach may provide the capacity within the wastewater system to allow for future growth, therefore reducing both the need for significant increases in the capacity of the existing wastewater systems and reducing discharges from storm overflows.

Investment planning for each wastewater system

We used the BRAVA results and our understanding of the causes of risks and drivers to propose an investment strategy for each of the wastewater systems. Find out more information on how we determined the investment strategies. These strategies help us to target the wastewater systems that need further investment to reduce the potential risks to customers and the environment. We've produced a table that lists the proposed investment strategy for each catchment.

We used a risk-based approach to identify the wastewater systems that we need to progress in this first round of DWMPs. For these systems, we'll develop an investment plan. Our technical summary sets out how we selected the systems to take forward.

The table below lists the wastewater systems in the Rother River Basin Catchment that we’re progressing further during this first round of the DWMPs into the investment planning stage. We've included a catchment map and an explanation of the causes of risks for these systems with links in the table below.

We'll publish the maps and causes of risks for the remaining wastewater systems in the Rother Catchment when available.

System Ref

Wastewater system

Wastewater system map

Information on causes of risks

FAIR

Fairlight

Fairlight Map (PDF)

Fairlight Causes of Risks (PDF)

ROBE

Robertsbridge

Robertsbridge Map (PDF)

Robertsbridge Causes of Risks (PDF)

ROMN

New Romney

New Romney Map (PDF)

New Romney Causes of Risks (PDF)

RYEW

Rye

Rye Map (PDF)

Rye Causes of Risks (PDF)

TICE

Ticehurst

Ticehurst Map (PDF)

Ticehurst Causes of Risks (PDF)

 

7. Options Development and Appraisal

Our approach to Options Development and Appraisal (ODA) is explained in a technical summary.

We commenced the ODA process at the river basin catchment (RBC) scale (level 2 planning). This enabled us to look across all the wastewater systems in the river basin and consider generic options that could work at the catchment scale, as well as those specific to a wastewater system.

The generic options are grouped into those that help tackle the risks ‘at source’, those that help to improve the wastewater system, ‘the pathway’, and those that protect or mitigate the impacts on the receiving waterbodies, ‘the receptors’. This process helped to identify the types of options that could be used individually or in combination with other options to address the risks.

We held meetings with partner organisations to build upon the list of generic options relevant to each wastewater system. As a group, we identified and proposed ‘unconstrained’ options to tackle the drivers and causes of risks identified during the Problem Characterisation stage of the DWMP. We then progressed these unconstrained options through the Options Development and Appraisal stage.

The options development involved evaluating each of the options in two stages. Firstly, to screen out unviable options to leave a set of ‘constrained’ options. Then, a second stage helped us to reduce the list further to leave only potentially ‘feasible’ options (see the Options Development and Appraisal technical summary for full details of this process). The process for evaluating the benefits and how we've taken the environment into account is set out in our Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) Scoping Report and the SEA Progress Report.

Only feasible options with positive benefits proceeded to the costing stage and this resulted in the selection of the preferred options and confirmed whether each was ‘least cost’ or provided ‘best value’.

The feasible options column in the table below shows how we applied the process within each wastewater system. Beginning with the generic options through the appraisal stages, the table shows the point at which some options were rejected and why. If an option wasn't rejected, it was costed and became either the final best value or the least cost preferred option (see ODA technical summary for details of this process).

Our final preferred options are set out in the Investment Needs tables for each wastewater system. The accompanying maps show the location of the proposed options within the wastewater system.

Please check the DWMP glossary for any unexplained acronyms.

The options and investment needs are not committed funding but an identification of the needs for funding. We'll include these options in our future business plans as part of the Ofwat periodic review of water company funding to secure the investment needed to implement these options.

System ref.

Wastewater system

Generic options screening

Feasible options

Investment needs

Investment needs map

FAIR

Fairlight

Options Screening

Feasible options screening

Investment needs

Map

ROBE

Robertsbridge

Options Screening

Postponed

Postponed

Postponed

ROMN

New Romney

Options Screening

Postponed

Postponed

Postponed

RYEW

Rye

Options Screening

Feasible options screening

Investment needs

Map

TICE

Ticehurst

Options Screening

Postponed

Postponed

Postponed

 

8. Programme Appraisal

The Programme Appraisal stage of the DWMP follows the Options Development and Appraisal (ODA) process. The ODA process identified the preferred options for investment in our wastewater systems to reduce the current risks as well as the risks up to 2050.

The Programme Appraisal brings the investment needs for each wastewater system together into an investment needs programme for the Rother Catchment. We look across the river basin catchment to review the investments needed, the timing of these needs and how they combine to reduce the risks to our customers and the environment.

We also look at the wider risk reduction that each option provides across all the planning objectives. Some actions, like separating rainwater from wastewater sewers, could reduce risks under several planning objectives such as storm overflows, external flooding, bathing water quality, shellfish water quality and good ecological status. The details of the method for prioritisation can be found in our Technical Summary on Programme Appraisal.

The investment needs in the Rother River Basin Catchment include:

  • reducing the number of spills from the 80 storm overflows which together currently spill around 2,200 times per annum
  • separating or attenuating excess rainwater in the sewer networks to reduce the risks of flooding and frequency of storm overflow discharges, especially in Hawkhurst, Wadhurst, Battle and Northiam
  • reducing nutrient discharges from the WTWs across the river basin to prevent deterioration of the internationally designated habitat sites
  • a catchment-wide partnership scheme to divert surface water away from the cliffs at Fairlight
  • improving the resilience of our networks and treatment works to prevent pollution incidents, particularly in Rye and Fairlight.

Investment Needs for the Rother River Basin Catchment

We progressed two wastewater systems through the ODA stage in the first cycle of the DWMP. These two wastewater systems serve a population of around 7,000 which is approximately 6.6% of customers in this catchment.

We extrapolated the investment needs for these two systems to the other 54 systems in the Rother River Basin Catchment. This provides an estimate of the total investment needs required to reduce the risks in all our wastewater systems in the catchment to band 0 (not significant). This concept of “Band Reduction” and full details of the process for extrapolation are explained in the Technical Summary on Programme Appraisal.

A graph to illustrate the extrapolation of investment needs across the whole catchment is shown in figure 1.

Figure 1: Rother: Extrapolated Investment Needs and Risk Band Reduction

The Programme Appraisal for the Rother identified the following needs.

  • A total of 22 band reductions are required in 2020 across the 14 planning objectives for the two wastewater systems.
  • By 2050, this will increase to 25 band reductions due to the impact of climate change, growth and creep.
  • The options identified to date would cost around £25 million for the two catchments and are expected to provide six band reductions in 2050 (the options do not result in a band 0 for all risks).
  • The Rother has 56 catchments which require 234 band reductions in 2020 and 273 band reductions by 2050 in order to achieve band 0 across 14 planning objectives.
  • Extrapolating the investment needs for all the systems in the Rother will cost around £434 million for a population of 108,000. This illustrates the scale of investment needed to get to band 0 by 2050.

These investment needs provide indicative costs that allow us to understand the level of funding required to reduce the risks. The funding hasn't been secured at this stage. The DWMP informs the development of our 5 yearly Business Plan which is submitted to our economic regulator, Ofwat, to agree on how we should invest the money received from our customer bills.

 

Consultation on the Rother River Basin Catchment

We held a preliminary consultation on our draft DWMP in September and October 2021. The purpose of the consultation was to gain feedback and advice from our customers and organisations on our developing Plan.

We specifically asked about:

  • our Strategic Environmental Assessment Scoping Report
  • our selection of wastewater systems to take forward into the Options Development and Appraisal stage of the DWMP in the first cycle, and
  • our developing plans for each of the 11 river basin catchments.

Our report on the initial DWMP consultation is now available.

When we consulted on the developing plans for the Rother River Basin Catchment, you highlighted key issues that we needed to take into consideration.

  • The drainage issues in Fairlight are significant due to the instability of the Fairlight Cliffs. A long-term project is needed to minimise surface water draining over the top of the cliffs and to deal with specific drainage issues within the area.
  • Drainage and land stability issues are major concerns and should be prioritised.
  • New and improved infrastructure is needed to increase capacity and meet the demands of new development and future growth.
  • Misconnections must be reduced alongside the risks from assets in poor condition.
  • Environmentally sensitive areas must be protected.

How we responded to the issues raised during the workshops and the preliminary public consultation is set out in our Register of Stakeholder Comments.

We held a full 12-week public consultation on the draft Regional (Level 1) DWMP between Monday 13 June and Monday 05 September 2022. Our Statement of Response and a report and analysis on the consultation is published on the Have your say page.