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New pipeline beneath Essex river to be constructed in the UK

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An innovative tunnel is being drilled beneath the River Blackwater and Langford Cut in Essex in the UK to enable a new £20 million (€23 million) water pipeline to be constructed while protecting the watercourses and the wildlife that relies upon them.
Essex & Suffolk Water’s new 19.5 km pipeline, which will run between Layer-de-la-Haye and Langford, will help make water supplies to customers in those areas more resilient.
The project team is using a process known as ‘directional drilling’ to take a 200 m stretch of pipe – created by fusing shorter sections of pipe together – beneath the rivers by creating a tunnel six metres below the ground.
This initially involves drilling a pilot tunnel as an initial guide, which is then widened before the pipe is pulled through the hole from the opposite side of the river. The drilling process, which began at the start of September, is expected to take four weeks to complete.
The new pipeline will help to ensure that raw water can be more easily moved between the company’s raw water reservoirs to be treated and distributed across the areas, helping to protect supplies and the environment.
Daniel Wilson, Essex & Suffolk Water’s senior project manager, said: “This is a really exciting milestone for this project, which improves our strategic network to support more resilient supplies for customers across this part of Essex and has been years in the planning.
“As well as ensuring the pipeline design delivers for our customers, we have also worked hard to ensure it protects our environment as well, and this process of passing the pipework beneath the River Blackwater and Langford Cut is an important aspect of that.”






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