09/01/2006 - Cranswick Country Foods, a meat products company,
were fined £12,000 at Hull Magistrates Court after
pleading guilty to polluting a watercourse with blood. The
company, whose head office is at Cranswick, Driffield, were
ordered to pay costs of £1,843 to the Environment
Agency, which brought the case.
The court heard that the case related to the company’s
abattoir at Staithes Road, Preston, near Hull.
Following complaints from the public about pollution an
Environment Agency officer visited the site on 12 November
2004. She found that Reedmere Sewer, a watercourse alongside
Luck Lane, was polluted for around 200 metres. Samples showed
the pollution was effluent contaminated with blood.
During an interview with Environment Agency officers on
18 February 2005 a representative of the company explained
that there had been a blockage within the foul sewer system,
which had caused the effluent to leak into electricity cable
ducting, and thence to a ducting system which led to the
watercourse.
The court heard the prosecution make the points that the
pollution had been in the watercourse for a week without
the company being aware, and that, despite a previous warning
for a similar offence, the company was still not checking
the watercourse.
In mitigation it was said that the company had responded
to the situation, and spent £1 million annually on
environmental issues. They had not checked the watercourse
because they believed their systems were so good it was
not necessary.
The magistrates said that they accepted that the company
had spent money and time on their systems, but that water
was a precious resource and the company’s failure to check
the watercourse was an important point
Environment Agency officer Bridget Ellerington said: “This
incident was entirely foreseeable, and was due to a lack
of maintenance procedures. Today’s results shows the Agency
will not hesitate to take action against those who fail
to take the appropriate and necessary steps to safeguard
our environment.” |