. Earth Science News .
WHITE OUT
Crisis meeting in N.Ireland over water supplies

by Staff Writers
Belfast (AFP) Dec 30, 2010
Anger mounted in Northern Ireland on Thursday as ministers prepared to hold a crisis meeting to discuss why tens of thousands of people have been without water supplies for more than a week.

Doctors warned the continued shortages could spark a public health crisis as engineers struggled to repair thousands of pipes which sprang leaks following some of the coldest weather in the British province for decades.

Some 34,000 people were still without running water on Thursday and some families have not had toilet or washing facilities for 11 days. Almost 80 towns and villages have been affected across Northern Ireland.

Scottish authorities have helped by shipping in 160,000 litres of bottled water to be distributed to homes and businesses.

Some politicians have said the crisis points to a chronic lack of investment in a province which only emerged a decade ago from 30 years of killings and bombings known as the Troubles.

But Edwin Poots, the environment minister in the semi-autonomous Northern Ireland Assembly, said the "buck stops" with the local water company and criticised its poor communication with angry homeowners.

He said engineers have restored water to 15,000 of the 40,000 homes without water but the thaw meant another 9,000 properties lost their supply.

Poots said three billion pounds (3.5 billion euros, 4.7 billion dollars) had been invested in recent years but the problem was a "historic issue" -- and he insisted Northern Ireland Water and not the government was to blame.

The minister told BBC radio: "The buck stops with Northern Ireland Water."

He added: "The under-investment that took place was over the period of direct rule.

"A lot of that was really down to the Troubles, when money was diverted from areas such as water to pay for bombs and security services and so forth. But if you have 30 years of under-investment, you are not going to catch up in four or five."

First Minister Peter Robinson and deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness were to take charge of the emergency talks.

Phillip Dempster, 31, from south Belfast, has been suffering from interrupted supplies since the thaw began just after December 25.

"It is just terrible, having to queue for water, it just should not happen," he said.

"I have young children at home with the school holidays, it is just dreadful."

earlier related report
Anger mounts in N.Ireland as burst pipes cut water supplies
Belfast (AFP) Dec 30, 2010 - Anger was mounting in Northern Ireland on Thursday among tens of thousands of people left without water supplies after a rapid thaw of pipes following freezing weather caused many to burst.

Doctors warned the continued shortages could spark a public health crisis after the massive interruption in supplies to homes and businesses left about 36,000 people without running water.

A major effort has been set in motion to tackle the crisis, with Scotland sending in lorries carrying 160,000 litres of bottled water.

Some families have not had toilet or washing facilities for 11 days and almost 80 towns and villages have been affected across Northern Ireland after the thaw, which followed some of the coldest weather in living memory.

Anger at Northern Ireland Water (NIW), the government-owned supplier in the province, was growing as people queued with containers at water distribution centres.

"Every time we call Northern Ireland Water it's the same -- they have no idea when it will be turned on," James Lawson, from Lisburn, just south of Belfast, told the BBC.

"It's disgraceful and now becoming a health risk."

Lawson said he had been going to a leisure centre three miles (4.8 kilometres) away to collect water and had resorted to going to go to the toilet outside to save water.

Health experts warned that the lack of water for people to drink, wash and flush toilets meant the situation presented real health risks.

"This is really now a public health emergency," said Peter Maguire, a doctor in the province.

"People with young families have not been able to flush toilets and wash themselves, never mind get access to drinking water. It's just not good enough. What's happening is really not acceptable."

Leisure centres in the province are opening up to provide shower facilities and civil servants have been drafted in to call centres in support of staff answering thousands of queries from the public.

Northern Ireland's devolved administration will hold a crisis meeting in Belfast on Thursday to discuss what extra measures can be taken.

"People feel they were let down, and they were let down," admitted Deputy First Minster Martin McGuinness.

"NI Water's response was clearly inadequate and we are now looking urgently at what further measures can be taken to alleviate the problems people are facing," said a statement from the Northern Ireland government.

Pressure was growing on Laurence McKenzie, the chief executive of NIW, and the regional development minister Conor Murphy in the wake of the crisis.

McKenzie admitted there was "a lot for this organisation to learn" but blamed problems on the rapid change in temperatures, which he said went from well below freezing to 10 degrees Celsius (50 degrees Fahrenheit) in a short time.

NIW said late Wednesday that 95 percent of customers were getting water after supplies were increased to their highest ever level. It is expected to take a few days before repairs are complete and the system is back to normal.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
It's A White Out at TerraDaily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


WHITE OUT
US shakes off blizzard, but not travel misery
New York (AFP) Dec 28, 2010
The US northeast began Tuesday to shake off the icy grip of one of the biggest blizzards in years, but beleaguered air travelers faced continuing delays from the after-effects of the massive storm. After an evening of ferocious winds, by early Tuesday the storm had fully moved out of New York. The system, packing enormous snowfalls and gales, churned up through Maine and into Canada, leaving ... read more







WHITE OUT
Adopted Haitian children fly in to Paris on Christmas Eve

Plane carrying adopted Haitian children arrives in France

Adoptive parents arrive in Haiti to fetch children

Caricom-Australia chide empty promises to Haiti

WHITE OUT
Ever-Sharp Urchin Teeth May Yield Tools That Never Need Honing

Tablet computers come of age with iPad mania

New Kindle becomes Amazon's all-time best seller

Skype brings video calls to iPhone, iPod, iPad

WHITE OUT
Growing Hypoxic Zones Reduce Habitat For Billfish And Tuna

China's Zijin Mining makes payout over deadly dam collapse

Sand from Bangladesh may boost Maldives

Study: Dams will damage Peru's environment

WHITE OUT
Polar Bears No Longer On Thin Ice

H.K. duck's epic Arctic trip sheds light on migration

Obama gives 'lump of coal' to polar bears: activists

Polar bear status at heart of climate war

WHITE OUT
'Food Of The Gods' Genome Sequence Could Make Finest Chocolate Better

'Plant List' gives boost to conservation effort

Study: Human error spreads GM crops

Chateau Lafite, thanks to a lucky 8, takes off in China

WHITE OUT
Northern Argentina hit by 7.0 quake

Drilling In The Holy Land

Fears for missing in 'biblical' Australian floods

Six Years After The Tsunami Disaster

WHITE OUT
Sudan's Bashir sets Darfur talks deadline

Violence surges in Casamance as peace process stays blocked

West Africa faces dilemma over I.Coast military plan

Bashir says door open to peace in Darfur

WHITE OUT
Designer Probiotics Could Reduce Obesity

The Ideal Temperature For Keeping Fungi Away And Hunger At Bay

You Are What Your Father Ate

'Living pigment' in rock art discovered


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement