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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
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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)
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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.
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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:


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Dr Richard North has shone some well researched light on this story and it’s looking somewhat threadbare in fact to say the least…
http://www.eureferendum.com/blogview.aspx?blogno=84714
Corporal Jones’ Ghost:
Thankyou for making repeated posts to this thread. As I am sure you know, the locals have been complaining mostly at the lack of dredging. But your account says the reduction to pumping was the major cause of the flooding.
Please be so kind as to post a rebuttal of the dispute of your account which is at
http://www.eureferendum.com/blogview.aspx?blogno=84714
and which concludes
Richard
Why are they wasting money on these pumps? perhaps we need to follow the money!
http://www.westerndailypress.co.uk/Somerset-floods-Giant-Dutch-pumps-switched/story-20639348-detail/story.html
“Peter Taylor says:
February 16, 2014 at 6:00 am
I live on the Somerset Levels – though ……
Dredging is a red-herring, because a) it does not work when flood levels are extreme, and is damaging to wildlife; ”
Depends on how you define ‘does not work’!
Dredging will reduce the maximum height of a flood, the lateral extent of a flood and the length of time the flood persists.
Either or all of the above would be a win win for those effected.
If dredging is damaging to wildlife, how damaging is flooding that has persisted for over 6 weeks now? I don’t think there are many animals that can hold their breath that long….
People first, I say…
REPLY: Didn’t know he had it. Ever since he started madly and irrationally dissing WUWT and me for taking a stance on the integrity issues around the pal review journal of his, I’ve stopped reading his blog. Willis once predicted he’d be all alone talking to himself; it seems to have started. – Anthony
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Well maybe you should start again because there is now clear evidence that you and Willis fell for a three card trick and there were never any integrity issues at all with the articles that were submitted to a journal owned and run by other people. BTW, this is not OT – you brought it up.
REPLY: Cyclomania aside, I don’t think Willis and I “fell” for anything. PMP Journal had reviewer rules, and those rules weren’t followed. That isn’t a debatable issue. I note Monckton has now distanced himself from it all, despite his claim of resurrecting the journal, which now isn’t going to happen under him. – Anthony
80 miles away to the east is Winchester. Subject to flooding.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-hampshire-26150006
To protect the town they are doing the opposite of dredging, they are putting temporary barriers into the river Itchen to cause fields to flood up stream of the town. Once river flows start to return to normal levels the rubble bags will be removed allowing the flood water to leave the fields.
So adding an obstruction to a river causes the water level to rise and can make the river break its banks.
But dredging, the removal of material from a river does not work?
How is it that apparently clever people be so wrong?
Clear to see why some in Government and other authorities now want dredging to take place pean and thimble comes to mind.the less places people look the less likely the truth will come out.unless some Journalist picks this titbit up??
Anthony have a read at this new article from Dr. North from Eureferendum calling the switched off pump story a RED HERRING: http://eureferendum.com/blogview.aspx?blogno=84714
Even as I type the BBC News is pushing the jet stream shift is down to ‘arctic warming’. They manage to do this whilst reporting from record freezing Chicago.
The other day they were suggesting it was due to warmer water in the pacific.
We get Labour Party leader Miliband now saying its all down to climate change (ie global warming).
Rest assured there is no way the debate can be conducted objectively.
Whilst the prime cause of the flooding appears to be the neglect of the EA and those responsible for maintenance of the dredging and pumping on the Somerset Levels, not much is being said about the historical siltation of the Parrett River and its tributaries, which has been a problem since the 18th century.
My mothers ancestors were mariners who sailed from the Port of Bridgwater during the 18th and 19th Century ( and possibly before that). The Port at one time rivaled Liverpool and Bristol as the prime west coast port. As it grew in importance, it had to be continuously dredged to keep it open and a floating harbour was constructed in Bridgwater that was controlled by a system of lock gates because the tidal range in the Parrett was huge. Ships could only enter and leave the harbour at high tide. For large ships, the Parrett was always difficult to navigate (often requiring manhandling and towing upstream when tides and winds were unfavorable).
When ships started to exceed 300 or 400 tons and were too big for the River – the Port lost its pre-eminence and finally died in the late 20th century. In its heyday, the Parrett River had to be regularly dredged to keep it open to traffic, a dredger being continuously employed on the task.
In my last visit to Bridgwater about 4 years ago, it was clear that dredging had ceased and the River no longer was capable of navigation by any more than a rowing boat. The Parrett River has also been neglected by those responsible, hence the photographs in this post showing the build up of sediment.
Whilst the Huntspill gates may be a significant cause of the problems, if it was to release more water, I should imagine that the flooding could be just as bad in the Parrett and downstream to the Bristol Channel. During high tides, that water has to go somewhere and that is up the silted River Parrett towards Bridgwater. The solution to the Somerset Levels problem will have to include a long look at all of the drainage features of the area, the most important of which is the Parrett itself.
@Keith. Willshaw –
“Thriving low carbon economies” is an oxymoron – ain’t happening.
@Legatus –
Yes, the environmental movement has become this generation’s premier array of genocidal criminals. As folks in the UK are all too aware, environmentalism, by means of carbon taxes, is killing more than 30,000 people a year. Here in the US, environmentalist resistance to flood control by combinations like the Sierra Club, Earth First, and the World Wildlife Fund are similarly leading to unnecessary deaths and damage, and the ethanol program is causing millions to starve in sub-Saharan Africa because grains become unaffordable and unavailable.
Greenpeace destroyed an experimental farm in the Philippines developing a GMO strain of rice enriched with vitamin A as a preventative of blindness in countries where rice is the dietary staple and where up to 500,000 children go blind each year because of vitamin A deficiency. While I generally oppose the death penalty for private citizens, I would definitely apply it to the leaders of organizations that promote blindness and death, and most definitely to any bureaucrat or government functionary of any station who promotes or carries out these outrages.
Since these people are so quick to penalize and silence those who support honest science and rational solutions to problems, why don’t we give them a dose of their own medicine and tax them enough to pay for the damage they do?
Hi.
I’ve read the piece linked to JLC to Dr.RN’s site.
I’m sorry to say that the article writer seems to have not understood how the Moors Drainage works.
I am going to try to precis the nature of the problem and then how the Pumping and Borrow pits work. I would normally need a few hours, a hundred or illustrations and lots of references, I’m going to have to cut that short.
The following concerns underground water, not the rivers, rhynes, stream or drains.
1/. The Moors are effected by tidal flow, not just in the Rivers, but right under the roads, grass, hedges and houses, the ‘Water Table’ as such is tidal. But it is damped so it doesn’t rise and fall the full extent of the Severn estuary but instead fluctuates about a seasonal norm.
2/. The greatest lag in the fall is furthest point from the outlet, a secondary reason for occasionally pumping at low tide is to assist in this drop in the underlying level, this helps the ground ‘mop up’ any water that does over-break a Levee as well as making it less likely as there is a tidal lift each side of any major body of water. (Refer: Anticline)
3/. So you have an incline in the table as the tide goes out and the general rise with the tide assisted by any river with a variable anticlinal seep, you have to think in 3D here.
4/. The KSD, Brue and the Huntspill are not variably anticlinal, because they are not tidal, the Parrett is.
5/. The KSD, Brue and the Huntspill are NOT rivers, they are effectively canals, they have no natural seep, they do not take water from the Moors through their ‘bottom’ or sides, they are entirely ‘water tight’ in that respect.
6/. If you were to empty the KSD, B,and H and block their feeds they would not fill all by themselves as any normal river would in a such a high water table area, they’d be bone dry. (but, having said that there is some doubt as to whether the barrier work to the Brue failed when the M5 crossed it, but that would be ‘minor’)
So how can pumping help this?
1/. Pumping has to be regular and contiguous in nature and occasionally continuous for long periods when needed or considered to be needed to head off or mitigate a failure.
2/. Doing this will reduce the height of the underlying tidal incline of the Water Table if your main point of depletion is at that end of it. (Langport in this instance)
3/. The pumps meant that across the Moors rather than a Tidal incline from West to East there was an anticline instead and the objective of pumping was to have the peak of the anticline further West than Burrow Mump and more marked on the Northern side than the South.
4/. The Huntspill stops being a ‘canal’ like structure at it upstream end, so that it will take water from the higher water table level at the East end of the Moors, roughly where it becomes the South Drain at it’s junction with Black Ditch, this can be verified by the fact that there will be a set of Borrow Pits there too.
5/. Black ditch joined The Brue and the Huntspill and if you look at the Google map for the area the picture (I guess taken in the Summer) you can clearly see that at that junction that to the East the river ‘dries’ and becomes ‘weedy’, that is because the water is seeping away into the Moor!
I’ve had enough for tonight, I will take this up again tomorrow (if anyone is even vaguely interested) .
Again, thanks for reading.
Well I was heading for bed but read the letter from ‘richardscourtney’ and I felt it rude not to at least put something right.
Dredging is essential, it always has been,and with the mess that is the Drainage situation at this moment, pressing beyond imagination, Spring will bring lots of water (if it is a normal one).
Forgive the capitals:-
I DO NOT WANT ANYONE TO THINK THAT I AM IN ANY WAY AGAINST DREDGING, THE EXACT OPPOSITE IS TRUE… IT IS ESSENTIAL NOW AND FOR FEW MONTHS TO COME.
I have to make that totally clear.
Again, thanks for reading this letter, I apologise again for the capitals, I’m not shouting at you.
Corporal Jones’ Ghost:
Thankyou for your post at February 16, 2014 at 3:36 pm which fulfills my request at February 16, 2014 at 2:38 pm.
You conclude saying
Please be assured that I am very interested and I am sure that I am not alone in that interest so I look forward to your comment tomorrow.
It is nearing midnight so I, too, am retiring and I wish you a Good Night.
Richard
Very interesting Corporal Jones’ Ghost, loved the 3D thinking angle.
Great discussion here, the comments prompted for further explanation and they got it
in great detail.
That’s how it should work, great work WUWT.
To Corporal Jones’ Ghost
Thanks for the posts and I assure you I will read anything you post tomorrow on this subject.
The Kings Sedgemoor drain has quite a bit of flow to it, even in the summer months the water will flow over the sluice at Graylake also the River Sowy has a flow even in the summer even though its not really a river just another drain like channel and that runs into the KSD below Graylake, when they open the gates In the winter months I can tell you the KSD flows with such force that If you were to fall in you would not stand much chance of getting out and the water level drops quite quickly what is needed is a way to pump the KSD 24/7 also I have noticed the banks have given way and slid into the drain some of that is caused by the winter flow and some of it is the damn cows on the bank churning it all up!, the KSD was built along a pre existing river, The river Brue on the other hand IS a proper river and always has quite a flow though in the summer its quite weeded up and gets very low in places, It was changed in the past to remove some of the larger bends and even after normal rainfall can rise by several feet and its normal to see it spilling over the road near Glastonbury, something I have noticed though is rivers slightly to the north that normally do get very high like the river Axe ect has been at normal levels or even a little below what I would expect at this time of year so go figure!
Awesome post.
“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.”
To add one possibility to what they meant by “deliver benefits locally” this document:
http://www.somerset.gov.uk/irj/go/km/docs/CouncilDocuments/SCC/Documents/Environment/Countryside%20and%20Coast/Somerset%20Ditches%20%26%20Ponds%20HAP.pdf
discusses how keeping the rhynes partially silted provides a good habitat for newts.
Thank you, Corporal Jones’s Ghost – you explained it very clearly. I and many others find this hugely interesting. It’s fairly obvious that many alarmists wanted to hide all of this behind global warming, but the truth is coming out and it should harm them AND their Cause.
Along with huge pay cheques comes huge responsibility. Someone somewhere has to be held accountable. This is a must. The environmentalists who made these decisions need to be dragged forward, their organizations also. They need to be held accountable. Fines, jail time, or something more severe – I don’t care.
It is also time to cut the funding. Time to dismantle or cast out green terrorist groups everywhere. They don’t have a clue. The problems they rant about are non-existent or minor, their forecasts are a joke, their solutions are costly, inefficient and kill people. Most of all, they lie. They lie and lie and lie again.
People are being used and abused, and they are realizing it. They are sick of the lies, of the dodging of responsibility, of the costs, the inefficiency and the poverty it brings. It’s been going on far too long and it’s getting worse.
This now – the flooding – cannot be ignored, because if it is, what’s next? Not just more and continuous flooding, but where else? Which area next to be returned to nature?
Seriously, the ordinary citizen will take the law into their own hands if they do not see justice done. And soon.
EA England and EPA America are on the verge of being worse than malarial mosquitos, when it comes to doing people harm. I do hope these people in these institutions are aware of history.
People only take so much, and although I am not aware of the modern equivalent of the pitch fork and torch, they should start to take notice of a rather large ground swell of people that are a tad upset.
Much can be said about the media whom have encouraged and supported these ignorant anti people fools, useful idiots many, maybe the old village stocks could be used to teach them a lesson.
john
John Archer says:
February 16, 2014 at 5:05 am
Those sluice gates, or whatever their called, don’t look inundated to me and lifting them higher wouldn’t make any difference at the rate of flow shown, so what does this video prove?
_________________________________
Incorrect.
Firstly, the sluice can only discharge what the dykes deliver. if the dykes are all silted, then not much water will be delivered to the sluice. The clue that this is the problem is the green tide-line above the water level. Why open the sluice more, when the water is already a meter below its normal level??
Secondly, the left sluice in that video is actually open wider than the right. The actual sluice gate is under water (hanging on that rod). If the gate were lifted clear of the water it could easily treble the current flow rate (the water topping over the top is not the sluice water – the real sluice water is running under the gate, largely out of sight). I suspect this gate was not raised further because of point one. The sluice is, in reality, much more eficient than the silted dykes, that cannot deliver suficcient water to the sluice.
R
BTW, in case anyone across the pond is wondering:
ROF = Royal Ordinance Factory. A munitions factory.
So we will not only have too much water in the future, but not enough weaponry either (our military is running at about half normal levels at present.)
R
From the new executive editor of Breihart, James Delingpole
http://www.breitbart.com/Breitbart-London/2014/02/16/Lefty-Lies-UK-Floods
I like his style and wish him well.
Breithart (correction)
and a quote from point 10.
Peter Taylor says:
February 16, 2014 at 6:00 am
I live on the Somerset Levels – though often away, as now, on ecological research projects. As many of you know, I am a climate skeptic – though not a denialist, reckoning, after three years intensive research and publication of a book, that current warming/hiatus/future possible cooling, is 75-80% natural, the rest due to GHGs, most likely. I am also a conservationist, also with publications and a long history of environmentalist activism – all the way up to UN level, mostly on ocean and atmospheric pollution issues. I am also a ‘green’, leftish, liberal, loving kind-of-guy, though I find it hard to recognise the current ‘greens’ as remotely like the people and the philosophies that birthed the movement. I also have some experience as an advisor and consultant to UK government agencies, including the EA/Countryside Agency and specifically on water issues, landscape, biodiversity, human settlements and energy strategies.
“As many of you know, I am a climate skeptic”
NO, YOU’RE ANYTHING BUT A CLIMATE SKEPTIC.