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Work begins to remove 'monster' 200ft fatberg in Devon

Engineers settling in for eight-week stint with pickaxes and shovels

Jon Sharman
Thursday 07 February 2019 05:57 EST
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The 64m mass of waste and wet wipes is being cleared by South West Water
The 64m mass of waste and wet wipes is being cleared by South West Water (AP)

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Engineers have been forced to use pickaxes to shift a “monster” 64m fatberg from sewers in Devon in an undertaking that is expected to last eight weeks.

Work has now begun on removal of the putrid blockage in Sidmouth created by oil, fat, and grease from wet wipes and other items that should not be flushed down toilets.

But heavy rain forced workers to suspend their efforts on Wednesday until water levels in the sewer became safe. They must use pickaxes and shovels to dislodge the hardened mass of waste, according to South West Water.

The company’s director of waste water, Andrew Roantree, said: ”The Sidmouth fatberg is the largest discovered in our service history, and [it] will take our sewer team around eight weeks to dissect this monster in exceptionally challenging work conditions.”

Following the discovery of the fatberg in January – the largest seen by the company – bosses urged residents only to flush toilet paper and their own waste, and not wet wipes or other items.

Cooking waste should go in the bin and not the sink, they added.

In 2017, a 250m fatberg was found in sewers beneath Whitechapel in east London.

A chunk of that blockage later went on display at the Museum of London.

Additional reporting by PA

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