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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
===============================================================
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.
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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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Reblogged this on Norah4you's Weblog and commented:
http://norah4you.wordpress.com/2014/02/16/you-are-wrong-re-co2-threat-kerry/
No problem, I go down on Thursday, my advice is being sought, nothing sinister.
A sort of “You were hear for a while weren’t you, you know the lie of the land” invite.
The ‘odd’ bit was that I was not expecting the call at all!
Corporal Jones’ Ghost:
I and I am sure some others would be very grateful if you were to inform us of what you find when you “go down on Thursday”.
Richard
Absolutely, full disclosure of all I find.
I love the levels, the scenery and ambience gets right under your skin, I’m sure everybody who has ever been there wants them back to looking as beautiful as they should.
Harry Passfield says:
February 17, 2014 at 2:59 am
BAE System’s ROF Radway Green, Cheshire, still makes small arms ammo for British forces. There might be others, too.
Britain is not yet totally defenseless against the EU.
Corporal Jones’ Ghost:
re your post at February 18, 2014 at 4:15 am.
Thankyou for the promise.
And it is not only the beauty of the levels as is known to everybody who has seen the wonder of children at the Dancing Trees.
Richard
An interesting article from the Parrett Drainage Board – http://www.somersetdrainageboards.gov.uk/media/Parrett-newsletter-2013-template-v6.pdf
Is the assertion that failure to pump into the Huntspill as previously maintained by ROF Bidgewater caused this flooding still alive?
@R.de Haan
‘Who knows where it was published?’
It’s from the EA ‘managing flood risk’ .pdf page 6
Parrett
Catchment Flood Management Plan
Consultation Draft (v5)
(March 2008)
link to pdf:
https://www.tauntondeane.gov.uk/irj/go/km/docs/CouncilDocuments/TDBC/Documents/Forward%20Planning/Evidence%20Base/Parret%20Catchment%20Flood%20Management%20Plan.pdf
My-oh-My:
Thankyou for the link in your post at February 18, 2014 at 9:21 am.
I notice that the document begins by saying
Well, I suppose the EA has been successful if providing an indoor swimming pool to everybody on the Somerset Levels makes their environment “a better place”.
Richard
The Environment Agency just another club of voters who have jobs but no idea of what they are doing but spin out who ever is in powers spin, labour or Conservative its all the same, fools are we because we consent to give away our power by voting fools into govern.
“Is the assertion that failure to pump into the Huntspill as previously maintained by ROF Bidgewater caused this flooding still alive?”
It most certainly is!
Just dredging alone will cause greater problems in the long run and will be regrettable in the extreme.
Dredging should be minimal, it used to be when we were in charge of the pumps, the scour we produced was not the action of a blade and the amount of Dredging was minimal and therefore the damage minimised.
If the pumping doesn’t resume and dredging alone occurs to clear/clean the entire Moor then in 20 years we can kiss good bye to the natural look of the place,
The concrete topped line of sheet piles will creep further and further up the Parrett, the run-offs will be concrete channels, the ‘idiot advocates’ of Dredging alone will have that as a result of their pleading for a single answer, they are morons. There is no other term for it… morons.
Because the pumps were off and the Huntspill became a ‘Fishing Amenity’ rather than essential part of the draining of the Moors there is a pressing need for dredging and that cannot be avoided, but the if they remain off each dredge will be as aggressive as the last and damaging as a result.
Dredging has to be a ‘light touch’ operation in combination with controlled and planned pumping with its concomitant scour.
Even with all the ‘knowledge’ available at their finger-tips the internet is still infested with the vociferous moron who wouldn’t understand the term synergy if their life depended on it.
On it’s own Pumping is not the answer, on it’s own Dredging is not the answer, put them together with a sprinkling of intelligence and skill and they will do all the work required with no damage.
Shame on all those who can’t/won’t see this.
@ur momisugly Corporal Jones’ Ghost – February 18, 2014 at 11:06 am
Sorry to labour the point (I have read your earlier posts so hope I haven’t missed the obvious) but could you elaborate on how the original ROF pumping occurred?
The OS map shows two stations, one to the east of the ROF site & one to the west. The eastern site looks long gone & the western one seems to have evolved into a small modern twin set. There is a similar twin set site further still to the west.
I am genuinely interested in how the ROF site operated (almost irrespective of the current circumstances). So if I may ask:
1. How was water drawn from the Huntspill & returned during your time (over/underground
piping)?
2. What part did the reed bed play?
3. Was water taken from below ground & if so, to what extent?
From the maps (Google), there seems fewer surface drainage/channels to the immediate area south, west & north of the ROF site as well as the wider areas to the west.
Thanks in advance.
Well 7 days ago this was the flood map
http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2014/1/27/1390846246559/Somersetfloodingmap.jpg
Notice that the area around the Huntspill, whilst it is showing some water inland, is not the major area of flooding.
That is around the River Parret and the Kings Sedgemoor Drain.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/2c/River_Parrett_map.png
Both the Huntspill and KSD are gravity drained to the sea at their seaward end (now with added Dutch pumping on the KSD).
The Huntspill was nothing more than a reservoir that could be flushed out or dropped at will, because our own pumps filled all the borrow pits and tanks on site, we could then pump out into the Parrett by-passing the need to wait for the tide to allow the Huntspill to be drained.
Gold Corner (GC) was our means to provide the initial water fill but also the means to drag water from the entire Moors basin.
As an aside, it is a single basin, the EA artificially separated the Moors into North and South administratively but they are both the same. under the soil. the high ridge that separates the two is just soil on top of the same shingle formation that makes up the Eastern end of the Moors, the ‘hills’ are simply on top of a spit of shingle many feet down, that shingle with its immense volume of interstices is the reason you can pump on the North Moor and drop the levels in the South, despite it being behind a hill!
So GC would draw water furiously out of the South Drain the SD is shingle bottomed (go take a look) and it is directly connected by that Shingle to the Eastern side of the Moors, so if you pull water at GC you are taking water from Langport a fair few miles away.
The interconnectedness of the Moors is invariably overlooked/disregarded/unknown by too many commentators and the lack of this particular bit of knowledge makes them say foolish things.
Aeons ago the Levels were a normal beach and like all beaches any shingle ended up at the tide line, in this case a line drawn between Ilminster-Ilchester-Castle Cary-Wells, the Ice ages also deposited a large amounts of scree and the rivers that formed from the melts caused the formation of all the ‘spits’ of land, they are the Somerton/High Ham ridge, the Somerton/Puriton ridge and the Wells/Wedmore. All of these hills are at their base huge scree/shingle spits and they are filled with water.any depth between 5-60 feet below what is 0m AOD.
Anyway, let’s get back to the unobservant for the moment.
Has anyone anywhere on the ‘net ever asked the simplest and perhaps most startlingly obvious yet unanswered questions?
Why is there a huge and very powerful pumping station at the ‘wrong’ end of the Huntspill?
Why is the river in front of the pumps so big but the river behind so narrow and small?
I will provide the answer tomorrow evening, I doubt if a single internet ‘pundit’ will know… the correct answer will knock every reader for 6!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_Huntspill
“The concept for the Huntspill River was first suggested by J. Aubrey Clark in 1853, as a way of improving the drainage of the lower River Brue. Faced with the need to supply 4,500,000 imperial gallons (20,000,000 l; 5,400,000 US gal) of process water per day to ROF Bridgwater, the Chief Engineer of the Somerset Catchment Board revived Clark’s plans, and combined the water supply solution with a drainage scheme. A 5-mile (8.0 km) straight channel was excavated using a dragline excavator during the early years of World War II. It was constructed as a priority war work, because of its importance to the munitions factory. The plans had been drawn up in late 1939, and by January 1940 the first excavations were being made.[1]
It ran from Gold Corner, where it was connected to the South Drain, to a new outfall on the estuary of the River Parrett,[1] and had retention sluices at both ends, so that it acted as a long reservoir.[2] It was intended that in the summer, when water supply was lower, it would serve as a reservoir with water pumped from the moors; in winter as a drainage channel, via gravity drainage.”
i.e. the Huntspill cab considered to be a long reservoir, pumped up into from the Easterly end.
It can also be used as a gravity drained system when required (though its level is normally maintained above the feed water).
And
http://somersetrivers.org/index.php?module=Content&func=view&pid=17
“The initial design was for a channel depth of 25 feet to allow a gravitational feed from the South Drain. Unfortunately the spoil from the excavations was too heavy for the peat subsoil and pushed the banks back into the channel. A new scheme was devised with a 16 foot deep channel which required water from the South Drain to be pumped into the channel.”
Yes, I said the same in my first paragraph, but that is not the reason for the seemingly ‘odd’ arrangement.
In fact the Gold Corner pumping station is the one that keeps the rest of the land inland ‘dry’ and that’s well upstream of (water wise) ROF Bridgwater. That pumping station is in fact the supply to it.
“A Pumping station was constructed [Gold Corner ] at which housed 4 Sultzer horizontal pumps powered by two-cylinder Crossley oil engines. The pumps are still in use today with one being electrified in 1968. The pumps have the ability to pump at the total rate of 1100 gallons per minute.”
to pump into the shallower than originally planned ‘reservoir’.
I’ll go so far as to suggest that if it hadn’t been war time, then they would have excavated down to the required lower level, carted away the soil, and lined it better to prevent collapse. Cheaper after the initial costs.
Things done in haste and all that.
Corporal Jones’ Ghost, Did I get it right?
ROF Bridgewater water system had:
1) South Drain draining the lowest spot of the whole “valley” (Levels)
2) Underground gravel layer, to allow the underground flow of water from whole valley to this lowest spot
3) Gold Corners pumps to fill the reservoir which holds the water (Huntspill river)
4) Sluice to the sea at the west end of the reservoir
5) Channel / pipe from factory to Parrett (to the sea)
6) Intake pipe from Kings Sedgemoor Drain to factory
So you could
1) Drain the whole “valley” by pumping water from Shouth Drain to reservoir (Huntspill river)
2) Take the water from reservoir and pump it to sea regardless of tide
3) Empty the reservoir (huge quantity of water) to sea at low tide by opening the sluice
4) If needed pump water from Sedgemoor Drain to sea
So even if rivers were silted, it did not matter as water flowed underground to the lowest point of the area and was drained from there. Rivers were not critical as long you were pumping the valley (Levels) dry from “underneath”.
EA did not understand what you were doing. They did not understand it when they made their plans and calculations that you were removing huge amount of water from the _whole_ valley.
When pumps stopped, all their calculations went wrong. They thought that your system was draining only the north side, or something.
When pumping stopped, rivers and channels could not flow enough to sea, groundwater level started to rise, until whole area flooded badly.
Unless the level of groundwater is lowered now
1) draining the area with surface flow will take forever
2) Area will flood again, as the groundwater is way too close surface. Any rain raises the flood again and surface flow can not drain the ground water because it is below sea level.
Any points from my guesses?
Google map showing fields under water even at summertime, at the south drain area and no where else -> lowest point. Designers of the munitions factory wanted to make sure that South drain was at the lowest area of the region.
https://www.google.fi/maps/place/Ilminster,+Somerset+TA19/@51.2030682,-3.0130602,11z/data=!4m2!3m1!1s0x48726d6336ed9169:0xffb06de6f15e45a7
Hmm, are these pumps reversible? Looks like they may be …
http://www.theriverstrust.org/seminars/archive/lns_Nov_2012/13%20-%20Don,%20Andy.pdf
But why would you want to do that, defence maybe?
Helluva lot of fish counting going on anyway – and this is a man-made waterway don’t forget 🙂
More fish counters …
http://www.northsearegion.eu/files/repository/20131129163642_ReconnectingtheNorthSea.pdf
A decent map (UK OS) – hopefully widely accessable.
http://www.bing.com/maps/?mkt=en-gb&v=2&cp=51.208056~-3.014444&lvl=14&sp=Point.51.208056_-3.014444_River%20Huntspill&sty=s
The ‘Munitions Factory’ site lies just north of a line twixt Puriton and Woolavington.
A connection to the site, from The Huntspill River is plainly visible.
2 Km South of the site lies Crandon Bridge, spanning the King’s Sedgemoor Drain.
If Crandon Bridge pump station supplied the ‘factory’ as a back up supply via pipework, then perhaps it is quite plausable that the factory could pass the water straight through to it’s own River Parrett outlet be it via The Huntspill River cum resevoir or direct pipework.
Lowering the KSD removes the west end accumulations virtually at source.
Zooming into the OS map one can see that ‘Gold Corner’ handles flow from the River Brue via Cripps River, and the South drain to the Huntspill River.
Blimey, what a complex area, I have sympathy with those trying to manage the whole thing.
Somewhat relieved I live in North Somerset !
Pip
Maybe a part of Keep Calm and Carry On. Flooding the levels would certainly have bogged down a few tanks. Bit of a stretch though.
‘…Lowering the KSD removes the west end accumulations virtually at source…’
Sorry I should have written ‘East end runoffs.’
And ‘reservoir’ not ‘resevoir’
Come on CJG let us have the locations of pipes, pumps and outlets. Otherwise no three stripes for you !
Pip