The real reason for flooding in Somerset Levels? Not global warming – river management

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A sign on a bridge over the River Parrett at Burrowbridge, Somerset. Martin Hesp says it is vital that rivers in the area are dredged after years of neglect that has seen capacity tumble Picture: SWNS
UPDATE: Satellite images added.

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.

somerset-bridge_2825383b
Composite image of the River Parrett in Burrowbridge in the early 1960’s (top left) when dredging was carried out on a regular basis, a recent picture before the current flooding event showing the encroaching river banks (bottom left) and during the recent flooding Photo: SWNS

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:

Hunstspil_ROF_map

It looks like they keep the Huntspill River artificially high, even in good weather. The voles must be happy:

Hunstspill_sluice

It seems the writing was on the wall in January 2014, as shown in this video:

Here are some photos from that same day:

DSC_0641[1]

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:

EA_Map

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:

Somerset_sat_image_article

Same area seen today from MODIS, the brown floodwaters are obvious, though reduced:

MODIS_Somerset1

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February 19, 2014 12:38 am

CJG: It doesn’t strike me that GC is at the “wrong end” of the Huntspill. The Huntspill was primarily built to guarantee a water supply for the ROF. The area to the south (along the A39 is a ridge of high ground, which as you have pointed out “is not an impermeable barrier” but does prevent surface water directly flowing to the north.
The draining of the area to the north & east of the ROF site is surely the logical source for its needs. The Huntspill also (now) acts as a reservoir to the moors north & east of GC, into which water can be pumped back during periods of low rainfall for irrigation.
What was the purpose of the pumping station at Crandon Bridge? Is is in any way linked to one of the two reservoirs shown on the high ground just to the north east?
What isn’t clear is the extent of pumping within the ROF site & the below ground connections. Also, the Google earth mapping does not show all of the water courses that the OS mapping does. My earlier assumption that the area around the site & to the west having fewer drainage channels might be, er, wrong.
Janne Pohjala: The underground strata, the associated water courses & the extent to which water moves between the two areas needs more discussion.
Pip Sant: The connection from the Hunstpill to the ROF site is a series of reed beds, which looks pretty dry on the present Google Maps (Earth) view. AND….. to echo…….. Come on CJG, put us out of our misery.

Janne Pohjala
February 19, 2014 1:49 am

Citizen, channel from Huntspill to factory looks dry, but square concrete slabs with grass are on top of the channel covering it, not at the bottom of it. Here is a opening in the cover at the factory end of the channel, and there’s water flowing in the channel below surface level.
https://www.google.fi/maps/@51.182474,-2.9530263,310m/data=!3m1!1e3

February 19, 2014 2:17 am

Janne Pohjala: Ah, ok. So is this a gravity fed channel ‘from’ the Huntspill? There is also a building on the left, which is probably a pumping station then.

Janne Pohjala
February 19, 2014 2:44 am

“The underground strata, the associated water courses & the extent to which water moves between the two areas needs more discussion.”
Definitely. If that claim “holds water” so to say, then one option to pump out the flood is to open Huntspill sluice as open as possible at low tide and run existing GC big scale pump station at full power, which would drain the whole valley all the way to Langport at SE at the rate of 17.56m3/s.
If the pump at the factory has already been dismantled, additional pumps could be placed at Huntspill sluice and pumping can be done 24h/day in case Huntspill reaches is highest possible water level before tide allows the sluice to be opened. This way Huntspill acts just at it was built for, as a reservoir which can be pumped full and then drained to the sea at high rate.
The video from Huntspill sluice can actually be very important. If that was before the main waterway to pump the water out of the whole valley, and is now at the upper limit of water and not flushed to sea so that more water can be pumped to reservoir during the high tide, no wonder that level of ground water will rise until the level of it is above ground..
As this important flood prevention reservoir has now been converted to some fishing estuary, EA wants to keep water level constant (high) all the time, which means that the flow of water to sea is only a fraction what it could be. Video seem to support this. With this kind of flooding, we should see totally open sluice gates and water gushing away from Huntspill, so that GC can run full power during the high tide and fill up the Huntspill again.
We definitely need more information about the geology and all other information as well. Claim is that CJG is that by pumping water from South drain, the ground water levels dropped all the way to Langport, several miles south east.

Janne Pohjala
February 19, 2014 3:19 am

About the pipelines underground. Could this be the end of a factory to sea pipeline? See lower left corner of the picture. Pipe is just next to Huntspill sluice.
https://www.google.co.uk/maps?ll=51.205823,-3.014682&spn=0.001519,0.002411&t=h&z=19
Yes, I would think that those reservoirs are linked to Crandon Bridge pumping station. They could be the highest point of the pipeline, rising from pumping station and then going downhill. These would act as a water tower.
It was mentioned that primary water source of ROF was Huntspill and this was secodary. This could also mean that this would also be smaller pumping station as GC. Could it be that GC is so large, to be able to do the extra draining too?

RichardLH
February 19, 2014 3:20 am

This for a very nice comparison of the flood problems around the King’s Sedgemoor Drain and the River Parret which is where most of the flooding has occurred.
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=83157&eocn=home&eoci=iotd_readmore
Flip between now and earlier.
Please note that, although this set of images does not show it, the area around the Huntspill River is not currently a big problem and that the pumping station at Gold Corner which is what fills the Huntspill (and hence is the priming pump for ROF Bridgewater) is apparently able to keep up with the flows to it at present.

RichardLH
February 19, 2014 3:37 am

Janne Pohjala says:
February 19, 2014 at 1:49 am
“Citizen, channel from Huntspill to factory looks dry, but square concrete slabs with grass are on top of the channel covering it, not at the bottom of it. Here is a opening in the cover at the factory end of the channel, and there’s water flowing in the channel below surface level.
https://www.google.fi/maps/@51.182474,-2.9530263,310m/data=!3m1!1e3
This Bing maps shows the connection between the two quite clearly from the OS map of the area.
Gold Corner to the Sea.
http://binged.it/1gECrp9

February 19, 2014 4:12 am

RichardLH: Thanks for that comparison link.
Janne Pohjala: This view shows two additional outfalls close to the Huntspill Slice: http://binged.it/1gEFPQW
If it hasn’t already been posted, this is an interesting document (as uncovered by Richard North) http://www.sedgemoor.gov.uk/CHttpHandler.ashx?id=9181&p=0. As he points out in his blog, very little mention to pumping.

RichardLH
February 19, 2014 5:58 am

This is where the big Dutch pumps everybody talks about are being are deployed (at Dunball). On the seaward end of King’s Sedgemoor Drain.
http://binged.it/1gFdg5I

RichardLH
February 19, 2014 6:03 am

The other place where big pumps are currently being used to pump to the River Parrett are at Burrowbridge
http://www.flickr.com/photos/68911555@N03/12228172996/
http://binged.it/1jbJjuk

Corporal Jones' Ghost
February 19, 2014 7:01 am

I asked yesterday if anyone could guess why the GC pumps are so massive but the ‘rivers’ that feed it are so tiny and almost flat.
If the GC pumps were switched on at full bore with ‘normal’ rivers of that size and flow the pumps would over heat due to lack of flow in about 10 minutes.
But they were often run for 4 to 8 hours at a stretch with that never being and issue and they were pumping into the Huntspill from the Cripps and South Drain?
From here this looks like being a very long letter, so you might want to highlight it and print it out because ink on paper allows easy tracing of previous points for recapping your thoughts.
I have put some thought into how to make this plain for all to see on a far from ideal medium.
I previously pointed out the nature of how the Moors came to have their particular formation, it was and is vital to the readers understanding of the matter in hand.
If you arm yourself with a pen/pencil and a sheet of paper you will make your life easier.
Right, on that sheet draw a large reversed capital ‘E’, so the 3 legs point to the left, about 150mm tall, make the middle leg a tiny bit shorter and about 3/4s of the way up the vertical leg.
Now, draw one of these… ‘)’ the smile bit of a smiley, and join that to the top and bottom tips of the rev.E but not touching the middle leg.
Now, imagine that the bottom half of the Rev E were a square and put a dot in the middle of that square.
Join the ‘dot’ to the vertical line of the Rev E.
Label as follows,
top horiz line, Brean on the left tip and Shepton Mallet on the right.
Next down horiz line, Puriton (left) and Butleigh (right)
The Dot, High Ham (promontory)
Bottom Horiz line, Bridgewater/Stolford (L) and Shepton Beauchamp (R)
The ‘)’ is the coast line in the Severn estuary.
Now on the vertical line ‘|’ of the rev E make little circles as is you were drawing tiny boulders along each side, then do the same on the two middle horizontal lines and smooth it out, cut the corners and partially fill it with these circles.
What you now have is a diagram of the prehistoric formation of the Moors, you are likely to be in possession of more real and more accurate information than the EA ever has and more importantly you can, armed with this little sketch make more and better judgements about what should happen on the Moors, understand why the Pumping ‘works’ and gain an insight into what is in the World of hydrology an amazing attribute of the Moors
Unfortunately I have to attend to something, back shortly.

Corporal Jones' Ghost
February 19, 2014 8:15 am

Back again to bore you senseless.
You can if you wish now go to Google maps, and select the terrain option and zoom into the area of our sketch.
You will note that the rev E leans back a bit and the lines are not so straight, your map is a bit like the modern London underground map, simplified!
On top of the pre-historical depiction we have sub-soil, soil etc. in places 5 feet deep and in others 60 feet.
Now take a good look at that Google map at the area just to the West of Glastonbury, see all those lakes, that is where there is barely 5ft of soil above the ancient shingle beach.
Return to your diagram, notice that we placed the ‘middle’ horizontal line higher up, this is important. There are two ancient aquifers that drain into them, one though is huge and the other small, the huge one is the lower part of the rev E and the small one the upper.
The underground water ‘migrates’ up the vertical line and tries to escape through that middle horizontal line to the sea and it does, but it also moves beyond it to the upper part of the rev E.
It is this weak Artesian effect that means if you pump water on the North Moor you don’t lower it, it rises!!! If the GC pumps were kept on for an extended period, they would drown and the North Moor flood, the South Moor would lose water and the level of it drop!
Effectively the GC pumps ‘prime’ a natural pump that is at least 1,000 times more powerful.
You may now additionally realise why we wanted the EA to pump not at the Huntspill but on the KSd, it runs parallel to the natural river under the hill it skirts and as such even if they were utterly incompetent they couldn’t cause flooding so long as they came on every so often they couldn’t cock it up.
Put them in charge of the GC complex and the mayhem would make today’s situation look like splashing about in a puddle.
That is why they are not emptying the Huntspill and turning on those GC pumps, they are not sufficiently competent to do it without creating a disaster.
This is a catalogue of failure after failure by the EA.
If you have trudged through this rather difficult pair of letters and persevered then you deserve applause and praise, we have cut every corner in knowledge out there, chopped bits off it, but if you have got this far you’re in possession of real knowledge and you can assess properly the ‘performance’ (both proper and ‘theatrical’) from the EA over the coming months.
Thank you for taking the time to read this letter.
CJG.

AJB
February 19, 2014 8:17 am

Best shaggy dog story in ages, nice one CJG 🙂 I hope the punch line is good.

Corporal Jones' Ghost
February 19, 2014 8:39 am

It is depressing to put in the effort and it fail… oh well.

RichardLH
February 19, 2014 8:47 am

This for nice big image of where the floods were on 11/01/2014
http://www.disasterscharter.org/image/journal/article.jpg?img_id=182592&t=1389872871284
As can be seen the Hunstpill River is in one of the ‘dry’ areas. The big floods are on on the River Parret and the KSD and to the North Drain part of the River Brue.

RichardLH
February 19, 2014 8:50 am

Corporal Jones’ Ghost says:
February 19, 2014 at 8:39 am
“It is depressing to put in the effort and it fail… oh well.”
I thought your words conveyed it quite well. A map or diagram might help make it clearer. I cannot find an appropriate geology map online at present.

Janne Pohjala
February 19, 2014 8:57 am

I think I understood the schematics, but I did not get why North Moor “beach area” would start getting more water in that what is taken away by the pumps?

richardscourtney
February 19, 2014 9:06 am

Corporal Jones’ Ghost:
Sincere thanks for your series of informative posts.
I have made my ‘paper diagram’ but I, too, would prefer a diagram supplied by you. Have you asked our host if that can be arranged within the thread and, if not, please would you?
I am fascinated by the apparent paradox which you report saying

It is this weak Artesian effect that means if you pump water on the North Moor you don’t lower it, it rises!!! If the GC pumps were kept on for an extended period, they would drown and the North Moor flood, the South Moor would lose water and the level of it drop!
Effectively the GC pumps ‘prime’ a natural pump that is at least 1,000 times more powerful.

Assuming this is true – and I have no reason to doubt it, then the EA seems to have been even more incompetent than I or the locals in the Levels have appreciated. This does not give confidence in the present and future activities of the EA in the Somerset Levels.
Again, thankyou.
Richard

RichardLH
February 19, 2014 9:32 am

For the Axe/Brue and the Parret here are the detailed Somerset Drainage Board Maps in clickable form
http://www.somersetdrainageboards.gov.uk/boards-membership/maps-2/
It looks like I was wrong, the Northern flood area is on the Axe, not the Brue.

AJB
February 19, 2014 9:35 am

Some punchline (crossed post BTW). How quickly do you think the current situation could be recovered using the mechanism you describe compared to what is going on now?

Corporal Jones' Ghost
February 19, 2014 9:48 am

The apparent ‘paradox’ comes about because the underground water keeps itself largely in check.
The effect of sucking water out of this balanced picture (at GC) is that the huge power of the weakly artesian water is released.
It is considered ‘weak’ because it is barely discernible over a few square feet of a well, so it won’t rush up the well like a conventional artesian well.
But the effect of removing water is similar to when someone pinches the fuel out of your cars fuel tank, once you start it works all by itself and the the flow will increase to a rate far greater than your original suck.
The same applies to the GC pumps, if you don’t know what you are doing then an underground Tsunami is released and the levels at the pumping point become critical, the pump will not keep up and it will be swamped, about 24 hrs later after you’ve flooded thousands of people out of their houses and homes it will have stabilised and drop again, but this drop will be slow because there isn’t a GC type installation near Langport, there is a plant, but not quite powerful enough.
It is a bout the ratio of the lower part of the rev E to the upper part, so the flow from the larger body of water to the smaller is exaggerated and the return flow minimised, the flooding is quick to arrive but slow to return.
I don’t know how to do pics and drawing things on the net (I’m old, forgive me) sorry.

Corporal Jones' Ghost
February 19, 2014 9:54 am

One of the issues is that ‘Policy 3’ extends to the area that contains the ROF and ‘Policy 6’ applies to the Parrett area.
Same Moor, different policies, a recipe for disaster!

RichardLH
February 19, 2014 10:11 am

Corporal Jones’ Ghost says:
February 19, 2014 at 9:48 am
“I don’t know how to do pics and drawing things on the net (I’m old, forgive me) sorry.”
Do it on the PC with any Paintbox application or the like and post the results from it to Photobucket (or other similar sites) as I do.
http://s29.photobucket.com/
http://snag.gy/
will even do it straight from your clipboard – just copy an image (ctrl+c usually) and paste it to the world with a ctrl+v 🙂
[Please add a second reply to show how the other users can post an image so it is visible in an answer, not just a link to an image. Mod]

RichardLH
February 19, 2014 10:20 am

Corporal Jones’ Ghost says:
February 19, 2014 at 9:48 am
“The apparent ‘paradox’ comes about because the underground water keeps itself largely in check.
The effect of sucking water out of this balanced picture (at GC) is that the huge power of the weakly artesian water is released.
It is considered ‘weak’ because it is barely discernible over a few square feet of a well, so it won’t rush up the well like a conventional artesian well.
But the effect of removing water is similar to when someone pinches the fuel out of your cars fuel tank, once you start it works all by itself and then the flow will increase to a rate far greater than your original suck.”
That does require a hydraulically sealed syphon with a vertical height drop for such increase to happen. I was not aware of any such structures below the moors.

Janne Pohjala
February 19, 2014 10:24 am

I see, it’s more like artesian layer but upside down and works like an siphon? How did you discovered it? Has there been this kind of event some time in history before, when you were pumping water out and caused a flood and discovered this feature and this way figured a way how to avoid it?