![5758659-large[1]](http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2014/02/5758659-large1.jpg?w=300&resize=300%2C201)
UPDATE2: Upon further inspection of satellite images and flood maps I’ve concluded that while what this commenter had to say about the history is indeed true, the impact in this situation is not particularly relevant. I was going on the idea that all of the flood control channels in Somerset levels were interconnected, so that there would be multiple paths of egress (directable by small dams). It turns out they are not, and the Huntspill sluice, even if full open, wouldn’t have drained any water where it was most needed. The real issue has to do with the lack of flow capacity in the Kings Sedgemoor Drain, (gravity drain, not pumped) due to silting and vegetation encroachment, as well as similar issues in the River Parrett where a campaign was launched in 2013 to get it dredged, to no avail. Thus I’ve changed the top photo and the title to reflect this new information about lack of management, putting wildlife over people. – Anthony
UPDATE3/4: This before and after photo shows the problem of silting restricting the flow on the River Parrett (originally only two photos, now 3 together which tells the story better.

h/t to Richard North at EU Referendum for the original two on the left, with thanks to WUWT commenters ‘Peter’ and ‘Jones’ and ‘Jabba the Cat’
This article at The Telegraph is the source: How Somerset Levels river flooded after it was not dredged for decades
===============================================================
We’ve previously covered the absurd claims that “global warming” was the cause of flooding in Somerset, UK here and here, with yesterday, even a senior scientist at the Met Office disagreeing with the spinmistress in charge, Julio Slingo’s claim about an AGW connection. Now we learn the real reason. Lack of management. The ROF pumping station was turned off in 2008 and nothing was done to replace it, while at the same time the Huntspill sluice gates to drain water to the sea seemed to be improperly managed by the EA.
I’m repeating the comment here to give wide distribution.
Bishop Hill writes: Commenter “Corporal Jones’ Ghost’ left this comment on one of the flooding threads. It looks to be quite important. (see my notes above in update 2, this claim while historically true, is no longer credible as a reason for flooding – Anthony)
============================================================
I want to tell you what really has happened on the Somerset Levels.
I am remaining anonymous for good reason, I think you’ll understand why.
You have to go back to 1939, when the MOD decided that they needed a new Munitions factory for HDX explosives, HDX uses a lot of water, all munitions manufacture does, but HDX is greedy.
The levels had too much water and so we built one on the Levels, ROF37 or ROF Bridgewater or ROF Woolavington, it’s all the same place.
To ensure that there was enough water even on the waterlogged Levels, we built the Huntspill River, we then connected it to the River Brue to the North and the Kings Sedgemoor Drain via a pipe to the South, we also widened the River Sowy to get water to our factory.
We would use >5 thousand million litres every year, rain or shine.
We then disposed of it into the sea, we had to do this regardless of the tidal conditions and we had steam pumps that did this remarkable task, they pumped out at the Huntspill sluice 3 thousand million ltrs a year, the rest was either evaporated, too contaminated and shipped off-site or left the factory in the product!
Part of the legacy f the fall of Communism was that we didn’t need quite so much ordnance to practice killing the deadly foe.
In the mid 1990s the decision was made and we ran down the ROFs.
By 2000 ROF37 was given an execution date of 2008 and like all state executions, it was carried out on time.
We all knew that the ‘run-on’ from our departure would be that the EA/Levels Boards needed to take over pumping, they couldn’t afford our old system as it was very old and on restricted land.
I should explain at this point that the ONLY pumping done was ours, we could and did pump no matter the tides, we’d taken over the responsibility/control in 1940 for all high volume pumping on the Levels.
We advised that the Huntspill be automated and the Kings Sedgemoor Drain be pumped and made strong representation to that effect.
But every meeting with the EA ended in frustration as they never sent a single seriously knowledgeable Drainage Engineer to any meeting. The Levels Boards understood the issues and tried to get the pumps installed.
It didn’t happen.
One of the problems with draining the Levels is silting, we used to pump in such a way as to utilise ‘scour’ of all the rhynes and ditches and pipelines to keep them clear, when we shut down in the 50s due to a slight mishap and explosion on site in just 15 days of reduced use we found the lines lost about 1% of their ‘flow sympathy’ meaning we had to suck about 1% harder to get the same amount of water through the top metering point.
We all hoped that the 2007 flood would wake the EA up and get them to re-think their stance on the KSD pumps, they would not even agree to a meeting! We were pumping furiously on a limited facility in that year or that flood would have been horrific.
Today, looking at the flood charts and pictures it is obvious that the connection to the Huntspill is blocked, silted up.
So the water can’t be ‘smeared’ over all the levels as in the past, that is why ‘record’ levels are being recorded in certain areas whilst others are barely affected.
The poor chap who has built an Island out of his home has my sympathies, he the KSD pumps been in place for the last 6 years he’d not be in the predicament he is in, nor for that matter would most of the others on the levels, the water won’t be going anywhere soon.
This is the reality of the situation, if you wish to check for yourself, you can go to even the Wiki pages and read about it (until they get edited no doubt!) but all that I’ve written is a matter of public record and can be verified elsewhere.
I enclose a single link to the fact that we did our best to convince the EA that the matter was serious.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King%27s_Sedgemoor_Drain
Quote from above…
Floodwater is removed from many of the moors of the Somerset Levels by pumping stations, which were originally steam-powered. These were superseded by diesel engines, and more recently by electric pumps. The King’s Sedgemoor Drain is unusual in that it operates entirely by gravity. Consideration was given to replacing Dunball clyse with a pumping station in 2002, which would have allowed water to be discharged into the estuary at all states of the tide, but this course of action was not followed. Management of the Drain is the responsibility of the Environment Agency, whereas the numerous rhynes or drainage ditches which feed into the Drain are the responsibility of several Internal Drainage Boards, who work together as the Parrett Consortium of Drainage Boards.[19]
The reference point… ^ The Parrett Catchment Water Management Strategy Action Plan. Environment Agency. 2002. ISBN 1-85705-788-0. Retrieved 16 November 2010.
I thought someone ought to know the real truth behind this fiasco.
=============================================================
Also in the reference in Wikipedia is this story which backs up the commenter’s claim:
As part of the war effort, an explosives factory, ROF Bridgwater, was built at Puriton. The Catchment Board needed to be able to guarantee that 4.5 million gallons (20.5 Megalitres) of process water would be available to the factory every day. To this end, the Huntspill River was constructed, a little further to the north, which was essentially a revival of a plan by J. Aubrey Clark in 1853, to provide better drainage for the Brue valley. King’s Sedgemoor drain was deemed to be a backup source for water, should the Huntspill scheme fail, and so all of the work which had been planned before the war started was completed, to ensure that the volume of water needed was always available.[14] Greylake sluice was built by the Somerset Rivers Catchment Board in 1942, and used guillotine gates to control water levels. The original plaque commemorating its completion was incorporated into the new structure when the sluice was rebuilt in 2006.[15]
To help readers visualize, here is a couple of map items from Google Earth that I annotated. First, the ROF37 munitions factory, Huntspill River, the Huntspill Sluice (gates) and their proximity to the town of Bridgwater:
It looks like they keep the Huntspill River artificially high, even in good weather. The voles must be happy:
It seems the writing was on the wall in January 2014, as shown in this video:
Here are some photos from that same day:
But no, it MUST be AGW because water mismanagement by the Environmental Authority is out of the question.
Of course, this EA map says otherwise, click to enlarge:
This is from a policy document from 2008 which referred to the possibility – so-called option 6 – of allowing parts of the Levels to flood:
Policy Unit 8- Somerset Levels and Moors
Policy option 6 – Take action to increase the frequency of flooding to deliver benefits locally or elsewhere, which may constitute an overall flood risk reduction.
Note: This policy option involves a strategic increase in flooding in allocated areas, but is not intended to affect the risk to individual properties.
Click to access Parret%20Catchment%20Flood%20Management%20Plan.pdf
UPDATE:
Satellite image from Feb 8th, click to enlarge:
Same area seen today from MODIS, the brown floodwaters are obvious, though reduced:
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.


![DSC_0641[1]](https://i0.wp.com/live.staticflickr.com/5513/12551395695_0377cc0d48_b.jpg?resize=800%2C600&quality=83&ssl=1)



The KSD has nothing to do with the bloke that built a moat/embankment around his house. The parrot has been overflowing in to the sowy the whole time the tone is overflowing in to currymoor then in to northmoor and ending up in moorland. The only way he could of been saved was if the sowy gate at Combe had been opened sooner….. People have no idea what’s going on do the research before blaiming people………..
Alex Payne says:
February 16, 2014 at 6:16 am
” … at the end of the day, if the water wants to go where the water is meant to go…. there’s nothing we can do about it! ”
—-l
The Dutch seem to have had a different philosophical approach to water 🙂
negrum says:
February 16, 2014 at 9:59 am
“The Dutch seem to have had a different philosophical approach to water :)”
As I said above (my bold)
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2014/feb/16/flooding-netherlands
“He shows the path down to the field that his cows take when they feel in the mood. “Six metres, up here in our castle on the hill! Now let the water come. I would like very much to see that in my lifetime. We have done this for the next generation but I would very much like to see if it works. I would like the taxpayers to see that it works. Let the floods come.“
Speed says:
February 16, 2014 at 8:10 am
“Sluice gates pass water beneath the gate. If water is passing over the gate, as shown in the video, it has flooded. If the water level behind the gate is higher than desired, the gate should be raised to let more water pass under the gate.”
For a wonderful video on how the French handle just this sort of “how we decided to use the water we have properly” at Mont-Saint-Michel
visit
http://www.projetmontsaintmichel.com/les_travaux/barrage.html#132
scroll down to
“Eté 2012 En images de synthèse, la réalisation du barrage”
and click on the link to see how they built the barrage and how it operates (and yes Virginia – the outflow does indeed pass under the sluice).
Further to Jabba’s comment, the Environment Agency’s live flood warning map (http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk/homeandleisure/floods/142151.aspx) is not showing any problems in that immediate area (at 1800 GMT).
Conspiracy much? (But then, whose?)
A very different story a couple of miles to the south.
The morons at the BBC try to sell the pubic just another scary scenario of a changing Jet Stream.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-26023166#
John Kerry says the science is “certain”;
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/john-kerry-blasts-climate-change-deniers-shoddy-scientists-1.2539163
Would it surprise anyone here that, after extensive digging into government records, memos, etc., that this whole thing was discovered to be some well camouflaged government environmental committee worried sick that some salamander or newt might be sucked through a pump?
Alan Watt: ” I assume that as in the US the government is soverign (cannot be sued), and that umbrella of soverignty covers ministries, boards, etc., ? ”
This only applies to the Monarch, as the Monarch is dependent upon honest advice, recommendations, policy, and legislation, introduced by Crown Servants, Agents, and Ministers.
The ‘buck’ absolutely stops with the Crown Servants, Agents, and Ministers, and ‘not being in control of their Departments’ is no excuse (the last Government Minister that had the honour and integrity to voluntarily resign due to the buck stopping at his desk, was Lord Carrington after the invasion of the Falklands) . Offences they are liable for include Malfeasance in Office (the commission of an act that is unequivocally illegal or completely wrongful, and gives rise to, or somehow contributes to, the injury of another person), Misfeasance in Office (not necessarily illegal but the wrongful and injurious exercise of lawful authority), and Nonfeasance in Office (a failure to act that results in injury).
It would appear that those three apply to quite a number of individuals, including non-British EU citizens, who could rightly be subject to an EU arrest warrant, along with very substantial fines, liabilities, and prison sentences of considerable duration, for them all.
Thanks for this, they should bring back public executions for the people who are responsible!:]
By the way, as America is a Rule of Law Nation (“If the Law makes the King, then the King is subject to the Law”), these principles also apply to your Government.
If they do not, you are no longer a Rule of Law Nation (and are a “Divine Right” lawless State, where “The Law is what ‘we’ say it is”). The Rule of Law denies power to those that seek it (because nobody can be trusted with it), by sweeping it completely off the table and placing it out of reach (the Rule of Law is literal).
That is why your representatives in Government are not Law makers (because making Law is the exercising of power), and are legislators sitting in a Legislative Body instead, where all resulting legislation must comply with the Law to be lawful, otherwise it is illegal, and void.
The final arbiters in whether legislation is lawful or not, are a Jury of our peers. If they find legislation to be not lawful, it becomes ‘Not Law’, and is treated as if it never existed.
As an aside, all legislation must be thoroughly debated during its passage, so that the intent of the legislators can be determined by the Courts. Otherwise you have the Courts ‘making it up as they go along’ and thinking that they ‘make Law’ (another path to the lawless State).
So stupidities such us “You have to pass it before you can read it” produces blatantly illegal legislation.
I’ve made an update to reflect new information. See update 2 at top.
Also, I recall seeing a photo the other day showing silting before and after at a bridge on the river Parret, but can’t find it now. if anyone knows of it, please leave a link.
You can find the pic on EUreferendum.
Rastech:
Thankyou for your fine posts at February 16, 2014 at 11:01 am and February 16, 2014 at 11:18 am.
If you have not seen it then I think you will want to read the discussion of the differences between US and UK government systems which is in the latter half of the ‘chicken’ thread
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/02/05/monckton-challenge-to-prince-charles/
I was surprised to learn that in practical terms the operation of the two systems is more similar than I had imagined.
Richard
Peter Taylor says:
February 16, 2014 at 6:00 am
“I live on the Somerset Levels…”
This is an interesting, detailed look at the situation, which is good to have if one is interested in what is really going on instead of the inevitable fictions that attend this sort of thing. I accept many of your points just because you come across as a knowledgeable and honest person. I do have to take issue with what has to be too kind an assessment of the EA, even though I have little knowledge of the organization other than having read here “option 6” and the list of raisons d’etre of the organization (big support of quixotic windmills and solar in a country not well blessed with sunshine and a dimming sun for additional irony).
I take issue because the environmental wings of every government these days are bound to the CAGW/government policy prescriptions for and the UK is certainly the most extreme of all countries in this regard – there isn’t even an opposition accept for the undoubtedly increasing swell of poor souls, badly served citizenry of the country. In the US, environmentalists essentially doomed New Orleans to disaster with court orders over years to prevent repair and upgrade of the levies that eventually burst (it wasn’t Katrina as the handy cause – just the last straw).
In your own words: “Britain is now a ‘poor’ country, virtually bankrupt as far as government funding is concerned!” Being an environmental insider as you are, and in the upper levels of the action it seems, I believe you can’t fail to be blind to the chief cause of this bankruptcy (yes there was a foolish financial crisis but these things tend to get mended in the space of a couple of years if governments don’t take on additional ruinous projects) – saving the planet from disaster and even when industry is going offshore and the economy tanking, to redouble the wasteful efforts, shut down cheap reliable energy, and press on with the idiocy. The UK is headed for disaster a heck of a lot quicker than the planet, which will end up being quite fine thank you very much.
The Germans are already foreclosing on all this green foolishness. They are too pragmatic to martyr themselves and they were doing better than most with “alternative” energy, but they have an earlier threshold for how much damage they are prepared to do to themselves. Ironically, the UK, like the Nile crocodile, is going to be saved in spite of itself by Germany, China, India, Russia, Brazil and even the US, though it is being guided by lemmings, too. Because the US still enjoys freedoms that have survived in the face of a government bent on destroying these, the energy industry is developing enormous supplies of <$5.00/Mcf (million BTUs) that have attracted US companies back home and probably British companies who use these feedstocks and fuels. They are even talking about repatriating the iron and steel industry! In a few years the US will be self sufficient in energy. They are even now shipping hardwood chips from North Carolina by the boatload boatload to the UK to be burned in converted coal-fired electricity plants. How idiotic is this?
Anthony Watts:
Thankyou for the update you report at February 16, 2014 at 11:23 am.
I do not have the photos. you want, but I draw your attention to my post above which is here.
Richard
Alex Payne says:
February 16, 2014 at 6:16 am
…at the end of the day, if the water wants to go where the water is meant to go…. there’s nothing we can do about it!
———————————————-
Tell that to the Dutch. Or the Canadians or Americans, who made rivers flow uphill in the Rockies, when we were still allowed to do such things. Not to mention the Panama Canal, which carries oceans over mountains.
@bj
Sowy relief Channel 1972 – Cpl Jones didn’t AFAICS claim 1939….
KSD is connected to ROF 37 by pipelene (bunged up yes?) and nobody would dispute ROF 37 connected to Huntspill?
Didn’t see any assertions about flooding on southern side of the Parrett which is a separate issue (although no doubt troubling for Bridgewater etc)
The EA have been intriguing around the whole Levels drainage business – and I’ve said before it seems more power and point scoring politics (© Smiffy) than responsible stewardship in honest collaboration with locals.
I don’t think anybody’s saying pumping would eradicate flooding merely that there’s been egregious neglect, incompetence and high handedness by the EA. All power to the Ops teams trudging around over there – but we are talking middle and senior management here….
Hi Anthony..
Is this the pic you’re after?
http://www.eureferendum.com/images/000a%20Parrett-015%20flood.jpg
I was first…………………………..I claim my prize.
I got on to Google Earth to have a look at the Kings Sedgemoor Drain. You can go to the street view as there is a roadway along side the drain.
I don’t know when the photos were taken by Google, but you can see that with the amount of vegetation growth in the drain, the “drain” won’t drain much flood water !
Whoever ignored this overgrowth, is a fool.
Hi.
Directed here from another site, thank you for reading my original open letter.
The Moors are tidal, right under the green grass and soil, there are numerous underground streams and tidal soaks that connect the Moors as a whole and the surface terrain is nothing to do with the vast amount of water that is present., that is why ‘drying’ a moor that is 7 miles away from a potential tidal disaster will often lessen the matter (although not avoid it entirely).
By pumping furiously at the Huntspill (North Moor) for sometimes a whole day, the water level as far away as Langport (South Moor) was kept below critical.
Drainage is often as much as about what you can’t see as what you can.
Due to the unique nature of the Moors, the ‘Bath Road Ridge’ between the North Moor and South Moor is not some sort of impermeable barrier at all, it is just a surface feature as far as drainage is concerned.
Thank you again for reading my original and this letter.
PS. I have long been searching for the perfect term to describe the EA and NMA nailed it, they were indeed ‘High-handed’, I don’t know why I never saw it before, but it really is them to a ‘T’.
I meant to add:-
It is far more important to pump water from the Eastern ends of the Moors than close to the coast.
The reason is that the Levees near the coast (Bridgewater) are higher (AOD) than those in the East.(Langport)
Thanks again.
jones says:
February 16, 2014 at 11:56 am
“Is this the pic you’re after?
http://www.eureferendum.com/images/000a%20Parrett-015%20flood.jpg”
Ironic isn’t it? The site where that photo ends up. The French when faced with a similar dilemma of the Couesnon River at Mont-Saint-Michel put it a proper, computer controlled barrage to ensure that silt was removed from above and below the barrage automatically by the tide. (see my post above).
Location of photo from EURef in Google maps is shown by this URL – https://maps.google.co.uk/maps?q=parrett+river&hl=en&ll=51.06965,-2.918431&spn=0.000972,0.002489&sll=53.709903,-2.101468&sspn=0.117248,0.318604&t=h&hnear=River+Parrett&z=19&layer=c&cbll=51.069583,-2.918563&panoid=7w6JaxWlwLVyR8IhI3Iihg&cbp=12,62.52,,0,6.21
Where is MAD Magazine when we need them? Don Martin’s “Late One Afternoon at the Warsaw Dike” (from 1976 in the era of politically-incorrect Polack jokes):
http://gcc.upb.de/www/WI/WI2/wi2_lit.nsf/0/1891758d0d1a81a3c1256eb2005b6ee3/BodyWWW/0.19C?OpenElement&FieldElemFormat=gif