- 30 August 2010

Want to be more energy efficient, there’s an app for that with our 10 amazing energy apps for the iPhone and iPad

There’s an app for being more energy efficient, and we have put together our ten energy apps. These iPhone and iPad apps range from offering general sustainability hints and tips to measuring your monthly energy costs. A lot of apps now focus on offering general tips and everyday actions that you can take to help save energy or measure what you use more efficiently.

Energy apps for the iphone

1. If you need to see just how green your local area really is try AllertMe Energy Map iTunes (Free) The app will allow you to find out the average spend per household a year on energy in your area, how much electricity and gas is used and how much carbon this creates. Energy Map shows how your borough ranks against others in the UK for energy use and CO2 emissions. Compare your area with the best and worst offenders in our League Table. Even use Energy Map when you’re out and about to see how much local residents in any area spend on energy. A great tool for any energy broker is the ability to view a map of the UK showing annual energy spend per area or simply browse through all UK areas from A-Z.

2. The British Gas App iTunes (Free) allows you to easily submit your gas and electricity meter readings at any time allowing them to generate a more accurate bill. You can view your account summary with your last bill amount, payment details, see what tariff you are on and when you last submitted a meter read. You can now also view your energy consumption as a graph and compare your usage over previous months and year. The application provides a convenient guide on how to read your energy meters and emergency numbers for gas and electricity. And if you have any questions the App makes it easy to email us and we aim to respond within 24 hours.

3. With Meter Readings iTunes ($1.99) if you closely monitor your household energy/water usage and the chances are you will SAVE MONEY! This easy to use application allows you to track your household utility meters. Once you start entering meter readings, your usage, costs and savings are calculated and your usage and costs are displayed in easy to visualise graphs.

4. The Kill-O-Watts iTunes ($0.99) is an electricity costs calculator. It lets you specify the electrical properties and usage habits for each appliance to find how many kilowatts-hours it consumes and how much you pay for it on a monthly and yearly basis. Choose from more than 120 typical appliances or create new appliances based on the real ones that you own. Identify the top electricity consumers of your home. Compare the electricity consumption cost of two different brands of appliances before buying one of them. Try different usage scenarios and find possible savings. You’ll be surprise to find out how much money you can save with this little application.

5. With the MeterRead™ iTunes ($2.99) its strength is in the calculations it provides. With each reading you record, you get up-to-date stats of your energy use, including an estimate of how many kilowatt hours you’ll burn for the next 30 days. You’ll know at a glance whether your energy-saving activities are on track, or if you need to turn off a few more lights”

6. Carbon Footprint iTunes ($2.99) is an application for the iPhone and iPod touch that allows you to track fuel usage for multiple cars. By entering a few pieces of data every time you put fuel in your tank, Carbon Footprint is able to collect and calculate a number of useful statistics.

7. With the Energy Saving #1 iTunes (Free) wouldn’t it be great if you could load your iPhone’s or iPad’s battery anytime, anywhere? Energy Saving #1 presents a solar panel on your screen and gives the impression you found the ultimate way to provide energy for your iPhone! Impress your friends with this great solution for energy production. But please pay attention to this: Don’t leave your iPhone behind unattended, Don’t let your iPhone get to hot, Don’t expect your battery to be loaded this way, but you will get new energy saving tips everyday!

8. The GreenMeter iTunes ($5.99) is an app for the iPhone and iPod Touch that computes your vehicle’s power and fuel usage characteristics and evaluates you’re driving to increase efficiency, reduce fuel consumption and cost, and lower your environmental impact. Results are displayed in real time, while driving, to give instantaneous feedback. Though it’s most effective on the road, you can learn from greenMeter even before you get in the car. By tipping the device forward and backward to simulate acceleration, you can see the effects of acceleration, aerodynamic drag, and rolling resistance across the speed range. Then implement this knowledge on the road, by choosing an efficient cruising speed and using the built-in eco-driving displays to moderate acceleration while you drive. Thanks to a novel algorithm that computes parameters over the entire speed range, the app does not need GPS, opening usage up to all generations of the iPhone and iPod Touch.

9. The ShopGreen app iTunes ($0.99) rewards the user by calculating, logging and saving green actions taken to reduce the carbon footprint. Daily tips and great green suggestions help making the correct decisions easier. Carbon savings are tracked within the built-in Eco-Bank. Location aware specials and discounts are offered through participating green friendly companies. Increase the Eco-Bank balance to receive rewards in the form of coupons and specials.

10. The Carbon Calc iTunes (Free) is a Green House Gas (GHG) emissions calculator. If you have wondered what your contribution to global warming is, Carbon Calc is a simple calculator that lets you input your Driving, Flying, and Home energy use. Once you know your footprint, you can compare your net emissions to the US average and the world average. You can optionally offset your footprint by purchasing Carbon Credits.

If you would like more information on our range of energy broker services or would like to find out how we could benefit your business, simply call our energy team today on 0870 710 7560 or request a call back at time to suit.

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- 16 July 2010

The new generation of Smart Water Meters is upon us

To measure and control your business water consumption in real time you will need to install a smart water meter.  Also known as Automatic Meter Reading,  these devices can bring numerous benefits to your business.  The only down side to current water smart meters is that they are not as precise as an electricity smart meter, but this is about to change.

Water Smart Meter

Sentec, the specialist smart metering company based in Cambridge, UK and Takahata, the precision engineering and water meter manufacturing company in Japan, are pleased to announce that the branding of their new joint venture, Aquiba (pronounced ‘Akeeba’), has been completed.

The Aquiba meter uses Sentec’s Sterling smart meter technology, applying electromagnetic sensing to create a meter with no moving parts, hence no wear or jamming.  It provides unprecedented accuracy, even at low flow rates, enabling recording of all water usage and supports novel applications including precise leak detection. The smart technology features remote readout at frequent intervals, providing vital data to help utilities measure and manage their water networks efficiently.

Tom Fryers, Commercial Director at Sentec and leading the Aquiba team, comments,  “This is an excellent partnership of two companies providing complementary skills – our Sterling water metering technology has already been proven in the market place and working with Takahata gives us the opportunity to manufacture some unique Aquiba branded products. We plan to trial with utility companies in Australia to ensure we incorporate all the smart features they need. We aim to provide utilities with a platform to build the intelligent networks that will be required in the future.”

Mr Yamamoto, CEO of Takahata Group says, “We are delighted with the progress our partnership with Sentec is making. This smart water meter and the future upgrades the technology allows opens up new, exciting markets. Aquiba smart water meters will be a valuable resource, especially in countries predicting water scarcity, where managing supplies is vital.”

Benefits of Smart Water Meters

  • Return on Investment typically less than 12 months
  • Billing on actual meter readings – reducing water charges
  • Rapid rectification of water leaks
  • Successful Monitoring and Targeting Programme reduces water consumption
  • Measure site against site
  • Control cost and manage future budgets

Detailed analysis of water usage can be broken down by building, department, tenant, equipment or shift.  Automatic Meter Reading determines usage over time, identifies peaks, compares sites and correlates use with the offending equipment or personnel.  It provides leak monitoring and helps leak detection and prevention.

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- 7 June 2010

Ten of the best Energy Saving Sites for Business

Top 10 Energy Saving Websites for Business Owners

The UK energy industry is going through some very important changes and as usual who is paying for it is us, business owners.  We all know how hard it is these days to reduce our energy costs especially when energy and gas prices vary all the time.

Energy Saving Websites

Energy costs represent one of the biggest slices in the expenditures pie of any given business, be it small, medium or large sized companies, a well planed energy management plan can help save money and reduce end costs.

With that mindset we have compiled a list of what we think are the top ten websites that can aid you in your quest to reduce your business energy consumption, therefore its costs.

Energy Saving Trust: The Energy Saving Trust provides a range of resources to help your organisation reduce carbon dioxide emissions. It also has a scheme to stimulate demand and supply of the most energy efficient products and services available in the UK.

http://www.energysavingtrust.org.uk/

http://www.energysavingtrust.org.uk/business

Money Saving Expert: is dedicated to saving you money on anything & everything by finding the best deals and beating the system. It’s based on detailed journalistic research, cutting edge tools and has one of the UK’s largest web communities.

http://www.moneysavingexpert.com/

http://www.moneysavingexpert.com/utilities/

Energy Helpline: Claims to be the UK’s leading home energy price comparison service.  An independent price comparison service, which provides customers with advice on the best gas and electricity deals for home.

http://www.energyhelpline.com/

UK Energy Saving: is a consumer resource on energy saving and related topics including renewable energy, alternative fuels, recycling and water saving as well as sections on fairtrade and organic products. Set up by environmentally concerned individuals, it is the intention of the founders that UK Energy Saving provides consumers with the information they need when researching energy saving and green living.

http://www.uk-energy-saving.com/

http://www.uk-energy-saving.com/map-business-section.html

The Renewable Energy Centre: is the only UK based website offering a practical and easy to understand introduction to renewable technologies, advice on installation, a directory of contractors, links to non-profit renewable organisations and links to sources of funding for those willing to invest in renewable energy generation.

http://www.therenewableenergycentre.co.uk/advertise.html

http://www.therenewableenergycentre.co.uk/

Carbon Trust: is a not-for-profit company with the mission to accelerate the move to a low carbon economy. It provides specialist support to business and the public sector to help cut carbon emissions, save energy and commercialise low carbon technologies.

http://www.carbontrust.co.uk/Pages/Default.aspx

Enhanced Capital Allowance: helps business to claim 100% first-year capital allowances on their spending on qualifying plant and machinery. Businesses can write off the whole of the capital cost of their investment in these technologies against their taxable profits of the period during which they make the investment.

http://www.eca.gov.uk/

Energy Saving Secrets: has a wide selection of articles offering energy saving tips, reviews about energy saving products, green energy and case studies. The site is frequently updated with new article written by energy industry experts making it a valuable source for business owners looking for fresh ideas on how to save precious pounds on their energy bills.

http://www.energysavingsecrets.co.uk/

Big Green Switch: like the Energy Saving Trust, it is a portal where users can make an online power-cutting pledge. Lacks the super-slick presentation and interface of the Trust’s site, but packed with content. Covers everything from travel and transport to water saving to waste reduction.

http://www.biggreenswitch.co.uk/

National Energy Foundation: assist organisations, individuals and communities to reduce their carbon emissions and save money through providing advice and services in the renewable energy, energy efficiency and sustainable training areas.

www.nef.org.uk

All these websites can provide valuable information to help your business reduce its energy and gas bills but nothing like a fresh pair of eyes with relevant experience of achieving tangible results to uncover areas where significant improvements that may not have been previously identified.

As one of the largest UK’s independent energy brokers Catalyst Commercial Services provides an independent and fresh approach to evaluating opportunities that can add value.

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- 1 June 2010

How To Reduce Your Commercial Water Bills

Other than fresh air, water is the most important commodity in the world. Whether or not you agree with that statement, you cannot deny the fact that it is something that’s needed on a daily basis, and that you just can’t do without it, no matter who you are or where you are.

commercial water audit

In today’s business environment, water bills are beginning to show up as a significant contributor to operating costs.  Quite naturally, reduction of your company’s water bills has become an important topic of discussion today.

While there may be some high tech and expensive means of reducing water usage, there are still some day-to-day and more down-to-earth ways of avoiding waste and making your water consumption more efficient, let’s look a quick look at some of them.

  • Ensure That No Faucet is Leaking: Here are some salient but probably disturbing facts (if you’ve been ignoring a leaking faucet): when a faucet drips once every second and remains damaged for a month, it wastes about 260 gallons of water and this adds up to 3,100 gallons if it remains damaged for a year. Even if you can afford to pay for this, is it really necessary to waste all that water?
  • Check for invisible leaks: Occasionally, there could be a leak that is not visible to the eyes such as those in the main water line buried underground.  One way of carrying out this test is to shut off all appliances that use water and then reading the meter. Leave this set up undisturbed for about half an hour, and read the meter again. If the reading increases during this time when it’s supposed to stay still, you know there’s a leak somewhere that weren’t previously aware of.
  • Use a Toilet Dam or Change the Toilet: Newer toilet models tend to use less water than the older ones.  As a matter of fact, older toilets may sometimes consume thousands of gallons of water more than the newer models.  Therefore spending a few pounds to buy the latest water-efficient toilet could result in significant long-term savings. On the other hand, if you use a toilet dam, it could block off a portion of the tank so that less water is consumed. This simple mechanism could also help you save hundreds of gallons yearly.
  • Avoid Flushing Every Other Item Down the Toilet: Do you know that every time you flush your toilet, you lose five to seven gallons of water.  Is that much water really needed to get rid of an occasional facial tissue? Imagine the amount of waste that could happen in a place where there are a number of people doing this.
  • Water Audit: Ask us to conduct a free water audit on your current consumption.  We can check for over charges and potential leaks that you may not be aware of.

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- 20 May 2010

All Energy Show in Aberdeen to Reveal Offshore Valuation Study

In its tenth consecutive year the All Energy show kicks off today in Aberdeen. According to the organisers this year’s show will feature 400 participating companies from the renewable energy sector representing 16 different countries.

All Energy Show

Already a reference in the renewables sector the fair will feature a series of sessions about wind power, marine energy innovations and a few others all focused obviously in renewable energy generations. But one session in special is causing a lot of buzz.

For the first time ever a full economic valuation of Britain’s offshore renewable energy resources will be presented by the Offshore Valuation Group, a group of organisations from the public and private sector, chaired be the Public Interest Research Centre.

In short, the report said wind and wave power has the potential to generate the same amount of electricity as is currently achieved by North Sea oil and gas production. By achieving only a third of its full potential 145,000 jobs could be created and by 2050 the UK could export electricity.

Tim Helweg-Larsen, Director of PIRC, said: “To discover that we own a resource with the potential to return the UK to being a net power exporter, and on a sustainable basis, is genuinely exciting, and a wake-up call to those in a position to foster the further development of this industry.”

Such potential associated with Government incentives, private funding, technical expertise and development projects in hand is pushing the Highlands and Island into pole position globally when the subject is green energy generation.

The co-operative Bank, a bank specialised in small to medium renewable projects of up to £25m will use the event to launch a new Scottish renewables team. The Co-operative also announced that it has designated £200m for renewable projects which will be mostly spent in Scotland.

Meanwhile governing bodies are preparing the sector to avoid the same errors committed by the oil and gas industry. Brian Nixon, Chief Executive of Aberdeen based industry forum Decom North Sea wants companies planning to invest in renewable energy operations to present a decommissioning plans to demonstrate how they will fund these projects at the end of their life spans.

“Where the oil and gas industry did not always think ahead and consider what would happen to installations at the end of their lifespan, the people behind the ongoing wind developments can think about how they are getting infrastructure in place and how it will be taken away afterwards.” he said

And added:

“By taking this action, they will ensure future projects are truly sustainable and environmentally appropriate.”

If all the predictions made by the Offshore Valuation Study are met, Britain is on its way towards a low carbon economy not to mention that this is a huge boost towards meeting our Climate Change Bill agreements.

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- 2 April 2010

The Catalyst Business Energy Market Brief – April 2010

uk energy prices

The Catalyst UK energy market brief, is a brief analysis of short and long term key energy market drivers, effecting gas and electricity prices, market conditions and future energy price outlook.  The monthly report helps you make an informed decision about your commercial energy procurement strategy.

Click Here for the latest Catalyst energy market brief.

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- 9 December 2009

Filed under: Business Water,Commercial Water - Catalyst Commercial Services Ltd @ 4:22 pm

Water and waste contractors are gearing up for “substantial challenges” after Ofwat’s final budget allowances for capital expenditure fell almost £2 billion short of what the largest clients claimed to need for the next five years.

The water regulator last week earmarked a total of £22.1bn for capital expenditure across the country’s 21 business water and sewerage and water-only firms under Asset Management Period 5.

A total of £20.7bn of the expenditure will come from the UK’s 10 largest water and sewerage groups – but the figure falls considerably short of the £22.4bn they told the regulator they would require for their 2010 to 2015 programmes.

The deficit had been much larger under the regulator and industry’s draft plans, with companies having originally claimed to need £27.4bn and Ofwat only promising £19.1bn. Contractors said the determinations were higher than they were expecting in the current climate, but were likely to mean the need for cost savings.

Black & Veatch managing director Chris Scott said: “Broadly speaking, the settlement is positive, but not without substantial challenges. “The increase in capital expenditure between the final determination and the draft determination is welcome.

However, it is important to remember that water companies are not a homogenous group; as a result, the determination will affect different companies in different ways.”

May Gurney chief executive Philip Fellowes-Prynne said it was most likely water firms would curtail their spending on the construction of new assets first, adding: “The likes of mains replacement and maintenance work will still be required, and obviously if you have water quality problems they need to be addressed.”

Costain’s group strategy and business development director Stephen Wells suggested that while water contractors had the right to negotiate deferrals for new projects, it was not the norm.

He said: “It would be wrong to say everything will go according to plan. The capital expenditure programmes will come under pressure but, under EU directives, the UK Plcs have an obligation to deliver assets.”

Mr Wells said contractors had expected the determinations to be tight. He added: “It is never ideal, but in our strategic planning we have taken account for these sort of eventualities.

“It is not about cutting margins, but clearly there are challenges for a lot of the Plcs to find efficiency savings, and it will be important to value engineer to help them get more asset for less cost.”

The water companies have two months to respond to Ofwat’s decision but some – including South West Water and Thames Water – have already highlighted funding deficits.

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- 29 July 2009

Filed under: Business Water - Catalyst Commercial Services Ltd @ 9:35 pm

UK households should see the average annual water bill cut by £14 to £330 over the next five years, according to the regulator’s proposals revealed today. The before-inflation cuts were set out in Ofwat’s draft pricing limits for 20010-15, but are likely to meet resistance from water companies. Water companies had been hoping to increase prices by 5% next year and 2.5% over the whole of the next five years, an average £28 above inflation hike with many counting on the rises to fund capital spending on water and drainage infrastructure. But the regulator said its draft determination would still allow water companies to ‘invest extensively’ in the network and spend almost £21bn over the five-year period. More than £4bn will be invested in improving drinking water and protecting the environment, Ofwat said. Water bills have more than tripled since privatisation in 1989, rising faster than inflation and the rate of increase in other utilities. Average bills in the South-West are the highest at £450 a year while those of Thames Water are the lowest at £280.

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- 24 May 2009

Filed under: Business Water - Catalyst Commercial Services Ltd @ 2:07 pm

They may already be under increasing pressure to develop a standard mechanism for measuring the carbon footprint of a company or product, but that has not stopped the global body for accountants, the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA), calling on the profession to also start working on methodologies for measuring water footprints.  ACCA has today released a new report entitled Water: the next carbon? calling on firms and their accountancy departments to better track water use and water risks. 

The report follows a recent conference hosted by ACCA and WWF-UK, which saw the global professional body sign a memorandum of understanding with the environmental group to work together on assessment of current UK water accounting and reporting processes.  The partnership could result in the development of water-reporting standards, similar to the global IFRS financial reporting standards that ACCA supports.

Vicky McAllister, sustainability advisor at ACCA, welcomed the new report and urged more firms to embrace water-reporting methodologies. “UK businesses should be addressing and reporting on the importance of water resources and management in their operations as well as upstream and downstream activities, one element of which is calculating the water footprint,” she said. “WWF UK is considered an expert in this field and the resulting research should yield some interesting results for UK organisations to take on board.”

Her comments were echoed by Dave Tickner, head of freshwater programmes at WWF UK, who warned that a failure to address water security issues could undermine firms’ long-term competitiveness.

“The sustainable supply of water to all users, including businesses, underpins economic growth, poverty reduction, food and energy security and adaptation to the effects of climate change,” he said. “Wise management of this critical natural resource is therefore in all our interests.”

For a free water audit click here

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- 6 May 2009

Filed under: Business Water - Catalyst Commercial Services Ltd @ 8:18 am

A “completely new kind of wave power machine” which resembles a giant swimming sea-snake could be generating energy off the coast of the UK within five years, its developers have said. Each “anaconda”, a device which could be up to 200 metres long and made almost entirely of a rubber tube, could be capable of producing 1MW (megawatt) of power. The plan is to have “shoals” or “schools” of the devices around the coast, where they would be harnessed to “swim” just below the surface. Groups of 50 anacondas could each generate enough electricity to power 50,000 homes at an “excitingly low” cost, the developers Checkmate Group said. A nine-metre version of the anaconda is currently in the final stage of “proof of concept” testing at a 270 metre wave test tank run by QinetiQ in Gosport, Hampshire. The test tank is the largest in the UK and can simulate the strength and frequency of the ocean waves the device would encounter in the sea. Checkmate hopes to be testing full-scale devices in the ocean within three years, with the first anacondas in commercial production and deployed off the coast by 2014. The anaconda is harnessed to the sea floor, and unlike other wave energy machines “swims” head-on to the waves, like a ship in a storm, according to Professor Rod Rainey who came up with the original idea. The waves in the sea stimulate a “bulge wave” which passes down the tube like a pulse of blood in an artery, gathering energy to drive a turbine in its tail. The electricity generated by the turbine would be captured and carried to shore by cables. Smaller versions of the device could be located alongside offshore wind farms where they could use existing grid connections to transmit electricity back to land.

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- 24 March 2009

Filed under: Business Water - Catalyst Commercial Services Ltd @ 10:39 am

Severn Trent Plc, the U.K.’s second-biggest water company, kept an outlook of sales falling by as much as 25 million pounds in the fiscal year ending March 31st. Sales will be lower because of a “decline in consumption across our measured income base,” the Birmingham, England-based company said today in a statement distributed by PR Newswire. This figure excludes sales from unregulated activities, which account for about 15 percent of total revenue. Severn Trent said in January water consumption had fallen more than previously forecast, mainly because of reduced commercial demand. Its commercial customers included collapsed U.K. retailers Woolworths Group Plc and MFI Retail Ltd. The water industry is undergoing a pricing review, which will set tariffs and spending levels for the five-year period from 2010. Water companies in England and Wales will submit final business plans on April 7 to Ofwat, the industry regulator. The companies submitted preliminary spending plans last year, which Ofwat later said needed to be reduced. Severn Trent’s preliminary capital expenditure estimate was 3.2 billion pounds during the five years from 2010.

Ofwat will establish price limits for each company in a so- called final determination in November. The rates customers pay will then be calculated according to that limit and inflation. The inflation figure is reviewed annually by the regulator. Severn Trent supplies water and sewerage services to more than 3.7 million customers in the Midlands and mid-Wales areas. It posted profit last year of 209.5 million pounds. United Utilities Group Plc is the largest U.K. water company by market capitalization.

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- 9 March 2009

Filed under: Business Water - Catalyst Commercial Services Ltd @ 1:19 pm

Flushing the toilet wasted too much water, David Wilks thought, and something had to be done about it. So the Yorkshire technology teacher went to his garage and set himself a challenge – inventing a flush that would release the precise amount of water required to clear the toilet bowl. His answer, a device called the Interflush, was ignored by lavatory manufacturers and failed to impress the sharpsuited business gurus on the BBC television show Dragons’ Den. Now Mr Wilks’s Mirfield-based company, Varyflush, has received its 10,000th order and the Interflush has been fitted to toilets in unlikely locations including the National Portrait Gallery, Windsor Castle and a Maltese government department. Mr Wilks, 56, said the product could reduce the UK’s water consumption by up to 20 per cent if introduced across the country. The average person uses 60 litres of water for toilet flushing each day, but much of this is wasted, he added.

“I used to be a technology teacher and schools were always banging on about alternative energy and protecting the environment,” Mr Wilks said, “but it’s all well and good talking about it; in the end, you need solutions.” The Interflush ‘retrofit kit’, made from plastic, stainless steel and brass, is fitted to a toilet siphon to offer interruptible flushing, whereby water is released for as long as the flush handle is pulled down but stops when the handle is returned to its original position.

It is a smaller version of Mr Wilks’s prototype mechanism, which was developed in 2000 and employed a full siphon that was modified to give users more control over the volume of water they flushed.

The inventor said the interruptible flushing process was forbidden by Government regulations until his prototype device proved to be successful in tests.

“In 2002 I got the authorities to agree to test my invention. It passed all the tests, so Defra then had no choice but to grant a relaxation in the regulations.

“Unfortunately, the day after I got the regulations changed, my worldwide patent rights ran out.

“I couldn’t afford to persist with the full-siphon model so I began working on a smaller retrofit product, and it has proved very successful.”

Mr Wilks promoted his product on Dragons’ Den in 2005 and, although he failed to attract investment through the show, he gained 10 minutes of valuable airtime.

This convinced him he should give up teaching and pursue the project full time, following the principles of Thomas Crapper, the Thorne-born inventor who devised the siphon flush in the 19th century.

His system was the only flush mechanism allowed in Britain until 1999, when rival valve-based mechanisms like pushbutton or dual-flush were legalised.

Mr Wilks said: “Britain is the last place on Earth to still have the siphon in any numbers.

“If the siphon goes from Britain, it is gone from the world forever.

“The siphon was invented by a Yorkshireman, and it’s going to be another Yorkshireman who saves it.”

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- 1 February 2009

Filed under: Business Water - Catalyst Commercial Services Ltd @ 12:58 pm

Britain’s largest water company has been fined £125,000 ($180,000), after polluting London’s River Wandle to such an extent that it wiped out twenty years of painstaking conservation work in a single day. The shocking incident occurred in 2007, when Chlorine escaped from a Thames Water sewage treatment works, killing most of the fish along a 3 mile stretch of one of the city’s most iconic urban rivers. Local residents tried to save some of the distressed fish by transferring them from the river into buckets of clean water, but they were too late. One man rescued a large number of eels, but found they were bleeding from the gills and they all later died.

In past years, the Wandle has been subjected to extreme pollution, resulting in it being officially declared a sewer in the 1960s. However, since the late 80s it has become a vibrant ecosystem, largely due to better environmental regulation, a fish stocking programme and massive local enthusiasm for the river, which has resulted in a huge boost in water quality. Conservationists say it could take as many as 10 years for the river to fully recover and the fish stocks to return to the same levels witnessed before the incident.

Since the pollution, Thames Water has pledged £500,000 over five years to support local environmental improvements and has paid compensation to local angling clubs of around £10,000. Many might feel that this amounts to a case of locking the stable door after the horse has bolted.

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- 24 September 2008

Filed under: Business Water - Catalyst Commercial Services Ltd @ 8:21 am

Severn Trent Plc, the U.K.’s second- biggest water utility, said performance in the six months through September is in line with company forecasts as it continues to benefit from higher prices allowed by the industry regulator.

Severn Trent is seeking to keep annual operating costs 3 percent below the regulator’s target through the next two years, the Birmingham, England-based company said today in a statement. Commodity and chemical prices, which affect such costs, remain volatile, it said.

The utility, which supplies water to more than 8 million people, has over the past few months agreed to pay fines to resolve regulatory issues encountered under previous management. U.K. water companies’ sales are rising as industry watchdog Ofwat allows customer-price increases to fund investments.

Revenue in the year through March climbed 4.9 percent to 1.48 billion pounds ($2.75 billion), Severn Trent said in June. Ofwat has allowed the second-biggest British water company after United Utilities Group Plc to raise prices an average 4.5 percent a year through 2010.

Severn Trent today said infrastructure spending for the six months to Sept. 30 is expected to be about 60 million pounds, about 45 percent of total net expenditure for the year. Net debt, excluding adjustments, will probably be about 3.5 billion pounds at the half-year interval, it said.

The company last month said it wouldn’t appeal a record 35.8 million-pound fine handed out by Ofwat for providing false data and poor customer service between 2005 and 2007. The utility also said at the time it would pay 5 million pounds to low-income customers following talks about a March 2006 regulatory report that it submitted incorrect data in 2002 and 2004.

Severn Trent in July was docked 2 million pounds in court after pleading guilty to charges from the U.K.’s Serious Fraud Office for hiding leakage data from the regulator in 2001 and 2002 to avoid costly repairs. No individuals were charged.

Customer bills will need to rise “slightly above inflation” so that the company can fund a planned 3.2 billion- pound investment program in the five years through 2015, it said last month. Utilities have submitted proposals to Ofwat for how price limits and customer-service and infrastructure improvement targets should be determined for the period.

Chief Financial Officer Mike McKeon said in June that the company has hedged for 93 percent of energy costs this fiscal year and expects electricity charges to rise by about 10 million pounds from last year.

The company will announce first-half results on November 25th.

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- 20 September 2008

Filed under: Business Water - Catalyst Commercial Services Ltd @ 9:56 am

Britain’s tap water should be monitored for powerful medicines after traces of cancer and psychiatric drugs were detected in samples, a report has warned. The 100-page statement, commissioned by the drinking water watchdog, the Drinking Water Inspectorate (DWI), reveals that pharmaceuticals are finding their way into the water supply despite extensive purification treatments used by water companies. Trace levels of bleomycin, a cancer chemotherapy drug, and diazepam, a sedative, have been found during tests on drinking water, the report reveals.

While the levels are considered too low to pose a direct risk to health, doctors have expressed concern about exposing pregnant women to drugs that could harm an unborn child. The report, compiled for the DWI by the consultants Watts and Crane Associates, recommends that drinking water should be monitored for hazardous drugs. The report states: “The observed concentrations of pharmaceuticals in raw waste water indicate that the major source of pharmaceuticals to the environment is via sewage treatment works effluent.

“Drinking water treatment works use a wider and technically more advanced range of processes, but again these are not specifically designed to remove pharmaceuticals and several compounds have been reported in drinking water.”

But it adds: “Even in the worst-case situation, there is no significant risk to health from the intake of pharmaceuticals via drinking water.”

Sue Pennison, from the DWI, said: “The recommendations are now being considered and this may include conducting testing on drinking water.”

The report comes as a separate study by environmental scientists has warned that toxic chemotherapy drugs used to treat cancer patients are being washed into Britain’s rivers. They, too, have called for testing of tap water to ensure there is no risk to people.

The study, carried out at the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology in Wallingford, Oxfordshire, examined the risks posed by chemotherapy drugs that escape into the environment through sewage.

The researchers estimated that an adult drinking more than three pints of water a day would receive a weekly dose of between 300 and 30,000 times lower than recommended safety levels.

They warn that a developing foetus would also be exposed to the drugs in the womb.

Andrew Johnson, the scientist who led the Wallingford study, said: “In the foetus, which is rapidly growing and comparatively tiny, the dose would be relatively higher and any damage to its cells could be far more serious.

“There is not evidence to show that drinking water treatment removes all these drugs, so while we are not wanting to alarm people, it would be foolish to assume there is no risk.”

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