Scottish Water photograph

Scottish Water

Use attributes for filter !
HeadquartersDunfermline
United Kingdom
CeoDouglas Millican
Revenue1 billion GBP
FoundedApril 2002
Production output1. 34 Gl/day (drinking)
Type of businessStatutory corporation
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2044060
Send edit request

About Scottish Water


Scottish Water is a statutory corporation that provides water and sewerage services across Scotland. It is accountable to the public through the Scottish Government.

UK weather: Last day of ice warnings before temperatures soar

UK weather: Last day of ice warnings before temperatures soar
Dec 18,2022 8:41 am

... Scottish Water said it had seen as sub zero temperatures tuned to a rapid thaw - leading to an extra 100 million litres of water a day passing through the pipes...

Bird poo pollution posters at Scottish beaches challenged by experts

Bird poo pollution posters at Scottish beaches challenged by experts
Jul 27,2022 6:40 am

... " Edinburgh sewage Sewage treated by Scottish Water is discharged into the Firth of Forth estuary via pipes...

Cancer screening led me to invent dissolving wet wipes

Cancer screening led me to invent dissolving wet wipes
May 23,2022 3:30 am

... " Scottish Water, which deals with 36,000 sewer blockages each year - 90% of which feature wet wipes - says " any innovation in this area is of course welcomed, especially if it reduces the impact people s behaviours have on the planet"...

Protests over water firms dumping sewage in rivers

Protests over water firms dumping sewage in rivers
Apr 23,2022 5:10 pm

... Each protest targeted a separate water company: •Edinburgh - Scottish Water •Tynemouth - Northumbrian Water •Belfast - Northern Ireland Water •Scarborough - Yorkshire Water •Bath - Wessex Water •Manningtree, Essex - Anglian Water •Worthing - Southern Water •Newquay - South West Water •Abergavenny - Welsh Water •Victoria Embankment Garden, London - Thames Water •Stoke Bardolph, Nottinghamshire - Severn Trent •New Brighton Beach, Wirral - United UtilitiesNic Bury, professor of environmental toxicology at the University of Suffolk, is running a project looking at E...

Storm Arwen: Third night of no power for thousands

Storm Arwen: Third night of no power for thousands
Nov 29,2021 11:13 am

... " Scottish Water has distributed bottled water across some areas of Aberdeenshire...

Edinburgh's little stone buildings hiding water secrets

Edinburgh's little stone buildings hiding water secrets
Feb 16,2020 7:58 am

... Although they have no practical use now, they remain intact and are looked after by Scottish Water...

Cairngorms loch dropped to lowest level in '750 years'

Cairngorms loch dropped to lowest level in '750 years'
Feb 16,2020 7:13 am

... Loch Vaa at its usual water level Scottish Water countered claims it might be responsible by saying that an underground aquifer and boreholes that supplied water to the Badenoch and Strathspey area were located about three miles (6km) upstream of Loch Vaa, and too far away to affect it...

The little-known world of the water-taster

The little-known world of the water-taster
Feb 16,2020 6:20 am

... smell and tasteScottish Water says it is already strict security checks has survived, before it is run through the taps, and again, if the samples come from the laboratory...

Cairngorms loch dropped to lowest level in '750 years'

Feb 16,2020 6:20 am

Millions of litres of water disappeared at Loch Vaa between September 2018 and May this year

The water level of a Highlands loch likely dropped to its lowest in at least 750 years in May this year, according to archaeologists.

Loch Vaa, near Aviemore, had been mysteriously losing water since September last year.

Archaeologists were asked to check for any impact on a crannog, an ancient fortified settlement, in The Loch .

Just below the water's surface they found pieces of wood that had survived since the 13Th Century .

Any old wood which was not Underwater at the crannog site has been long lost through exposure to The Elements .

By May this year Loch Vaa, which is fed by a spring, was estimated to have dropped by 1. 4m (4. 5ft) since September 2018 - with no clear explanation of the reason.

There were concerns that timbers which had been used in the construction of the crannog, and preserved for centuries in The Loch , would be exposed to damage by the dramatic Fall In water level.

Archaeologists and The Living On Water crannog project were asked to investigate The State of the archaeological site in the Cairngorms.

The Site was found to have survived The Drop in water level unscathed.

The archaeologists also radiocarbon dated samples of timbers found just a few centimetres Underwater .

The Birch , a species of tree "not known for being particularly robust" according to the archaeologists, was dated back to the 13Th Century .

The research confirmed a medieval phase of the crannog, and that the water level likely reached its lowest level since that time in May this year.

The water level has since returned to normal.

Loch Vaa is managed as a community asset for recreational fishing and water sports.

The Scottish Environment Protection Agency suggested The Loch had suffered due to a "relatively dry" Winter .

Loch Vaa at its usual water level

Scottish Water countered claims it might be responsible by saying that an underground aquifer and boreholes that supplied water to the Badenoch and Strathspey area were located about three miles (6km) upstream of Loch Vaa, and too Far Away to affect it.

Crannogs were fortified settlements constructed on artificial islands in lochs.

It was thought they were first built in the Iron Age , a period that began around 800 BC.

But four Western Isles sites have been radiocarbon dated to about 3640-3360 BC in the Neolithic period - before the erection of Stonehenge's Stone Circle .

Archaeologists said it was possible there was earlier activity at the crannog in Loch Vaa dating back to Pictish or Iron Age times.



archaeology, aviemore

Source of news: bbc.com

Related Persons

Next Profile ❯