
Yorkshire Water says hosepipe ban cut use by 10%
Yorkshire Water said smart meters had helped to identity properties with leaky pipework, and so far, half the customers who had been informed they had leaks had taken steps to fix them, saving 1.5 million litres per day.Dave Kaye, the company's director of water, said: "A 10% reduction in domestic water use since restrictions were implemented is fantastic and testament to our customers who understand the need to put the hosepipes away and to save water where they can after an extremely dry 2025 so far."The ban applies to customers across much of Yorkshire, parts of North Lincolnshire and parts of Derbyshire, and is expected to remain until winter. It means people should not use hosepipes for activities such as watering the garden, washing the car or filling a paddling pool.
Mr Kaye added: "We have seen temperatures drop and patches of rainfall across the region in recent weeks, which both help to bring down demand for water, but reservoir levels are still falling as we continue to distribute over 1.2 billion litres of water every day. "We really appreciate the efforts of residential and business customers to do what they can to reduce water usage."Our teams are working around the clock to find and fix leaks, repairing more than 800 every week to keep water in supply."He said the restrictions remained in place but the company had since applied to the Environment Agency for drought permits and orders, to manage the water resources picture in the near and longer-term. The permits allow Yorkshire Water to temporarily draw more water from the River Wharfe when conditions allow, reducing pressure on reservoirs and help extend water supplies through summer. Mr Kaye said:"We will keep customers updated on water resources over the coming weeks and months and will remove the hosepipe restrictions as soon as we can."
Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look No
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
6 hours ago
- The Independent
UK sizzled in fifth warmest July on record
Last month was the UK's fifth warmest July on record, as long periods of hot weather saw parts of the country experience two heatwaves in quick succession. The mean average temperature across the month was 16.8C, according to provisional figures from the Met Office. This is slightly below the warmest July on record in 2006, when the average reached 17.8C, and is also behind 2018 (17.2C), 1983 (17.1C) and 2013 (17.0C). July was the sixth consecutive month of above-average mean temperatures for the UK and followed the warmest June on record for England and second warmest June for the country as a whole. The first day of July brought the hottest temperature of the year so far, with 35.8C measured in Faversham in Kent, and two separate heatwaves affected much of the UK in the first half of the month. The long spells of dry weather this year have already led to four areas being declared officially in drought: the East Midlands, north-west England, the West Midlands and Yorkshire. All four UK nations recorded one of their top 10 warmest Julys: Scotland and Northern Ireland saw their sixth warmest, England its seventh and Wales its tenth. Met Office temperature records begin in 1884.


Times
6 hours ago
- Times
Can satellites help these leaky pipe hunters end hosepipe bans?
If you spotted Paul Telford and Giles Surman out of your front window, you might wonder what on earth they were doing. Marching from house to house, they pause outside each one, jab a long metal stick at the ground, and press an ear to its top, as though listening to the pavement. Peculiar though this routine may seem, you should be thankful they perform it, because without it your taps might run dry. Telford and Surman are leakage technicians for Northumbrian Water. They spend their days lifting the small black lids that punctuate the pavement, and listen for the hiss of a leak from the pipes beneath. 'Sometimes we open up hundreds of boxes before finding a leak,' Telford said. 'It's pretty boring. Nah, it's not actually, because when you find a leak it's good.' 'Most important thing, isn't it, water?' Surman added. 'It's all right on a sunny day like today,' Telford said. 'But in the wind and rain, we're still out looking for them. The rain interferes with your listening.' Most of the leaks they find spray out about a litre a second, which might not sound like much until you consider that there are 86,400 seconds in a day. On an average day three billion litres of water are lost this way in Britain — one in every five pumped into the water network. It is partly thanks to leakage that water companies have had to impose hosepipe bans on nearly nine million customers this summer to stop reservoirs falling perilously low. This problem has always dogged water companies. The efforts of technicians such as Telford and Surman have managed to reduce it by 41 per cent since 1989. But with Britain having just endured its driest spring on record and with climate change threatening to make summers more arid, the pressure is on to reduce it further. The Environment Agency has warned that unless water companies halve leakage, build more reservoirs and encourage their customers to use less water, England will face a shortage of five billion litres a day by 2055. • UK set for third heatwave but drought is more concerning So Telford and Surman are in a race against time. It's fortunate, then, that technology is helping them speed up. Northumbrian Water has partnered with a Newcastle-based start-up, Origin Tech, which has worked out how to spot leaks via satellite. Origin's analysts have noticed that when satellites project radar signals at wet ground, the signals bounce back at a different amplitude than they would from dry ground, giving a clue as to where pipes may be leaking. They have also noticed that land around leaky pipes is more likely to subside and be heavily vegetated. Combining all these clues, their AI model can spot a leak with 80 per cent accuracy. With the tech company's help, Telford and Surman no longer have to traipse about entire housing estates. They can narrow down the location of a leak to a 20m radius. 'It saves you walking five or six miles,' Telford said. Origin claims that without its technology, leakage technicians spot about one leak a day, and with it, they spot four or five. 'The satellite's pretty good, like,' Telford said. 'You find leaks at the majority of points it's spotted. You get the odd one where I don't know what it's picked up. But it's a lot quicker.' The Origin team has also worked out how to fix leaks without digging up the road, saving a great deal of time, expense and motorists' annoyance. They do so by filling the leaky pipes with a grey goo made from calcium carbonate. As the goo leaks out of the pipe, the calcium carbonate particles get stuck in the hole, sealing it up. The goo is then pumped back out, leaving the pipe watertight. Working also with water companies including Thames, Affinity, Yorkshire and the Pennon Group, which owns South West Water, Origin has used satellites to spot leaks spouting 20 million litres a day and used its no-dig technology to fix 10,000 pipes, saving 100 million litres a day. John Marsden, the company's founding director, said: 'Those numbers are mainly just from doing trials with water companies. We can easily double or triple those numbers as we scale up. So I think we'll make an impact. 'Most of the leaks we find are the ones that are really hard to find. We're not going to find all the leaks but there are still lots of low-hanging fruit.' Jeremy Heath, the zero leakage project lead at UK Water Industry Research, said that as Britain attempted to save water in the face of climate change, new technologies to find and fix leaks would be 'really useful'. He said: 'Halving leakage is going to be really tricky to do. Places like Tokyo, Singapore and Holland have achieved really low leakage, but they've done that by replacing their entire pipe network. We could do that but it would be really expensive. 'So solutions like Origin's that allow us to carry out the repairs quickly and without having to dig up the road are really, really useful indeed.' Heath added that researchers at the University of Sheffield had developed another promising techno-fix: robots the size of toy cars that can crawl through pipes to spot the exact location of a leak. Thames Water, Wessex Water and Welsh Water are partnering with them.


BBC News
9 hours ago
- BBC News
Dublin mains water may be affected by repair works
An appeal has been made for people in the greater Dublin area to conserve water this weekend ahead of "critical and complex" repair works.A pipeline supplying one third of the region's drinking water is at risk of failure and will be turned off for 28 hours from 11pm tonight to enable complex repairs to take people may experience interruptions to their water supply including low pressure, discoloured water, or water outages.A spokesperson for Uisce Éireann said: "We are appealing to everyone to act together and only use water for essential needs." The works scheduled for the weekend will repair a major pipeline that connects Ballymore Eustace Water Treatment Plant with the Saggart Reservoir, both south west of the are scheduled to "work through the day and night" to maintain the water supply as there is 28 hours' storage to supply customers in the Healy of Uisce Éireann said specialist teams would repair five active leaks and replace 35 metres of major pipeline supplies one third of the Greater Dublin's drinking water and will be turned off to facilitate these repairs.