Dee Valley Water

Dee Valley Water / Dŵr Dyffryn Dyfrdwy
Public limited company
Industry Public Utility
Predecessor

Wrexham Water PLC (formerly Wrexham and East Denbighshire Water Company and Wrexham Waterworks Company)

Chester Waterworks PLC
Founded

1863 (as Wrexham Waterworks Company)

1997
Headquarters Packsaddle
Rhostyllen,
Wrexham, United Kingdom
Number of employees
3,000
Parent Dee Valley Group PLC (LSE: DVW)
Subsidiaries Wrexham Water PLC
Website http://www.deevalleywater.co.uk

Dee Valley Water / Dŵr Dyffryn Dyfrdwy is a company which supplies drinking water services to parts of North East Wales and parts of North West England. Its parent entity, Dee Valley Group PLC has shares are listed on the FTSE Fledgling Index on the London Stock Exchange.

It is regulated under the Water Industry Act 1991.

History

Wrexham Waterworks Company

After Wrexham achieved its Charter of Incorporation in 1857, attentions turned to a proper water supply for the town, as residents relied on wells and the River Gwenfro for their water supply, which contained trade effluence from the many breweries, leatherworks and brickworks present. In 1863, the Wrexham Waterworks Company was first established with the aim of pumping water from nearby Pentrebychan, West enough of the town to not be influenced by pollution. The first works, opened in the same year, were primitive, with only a reservoir and slow sand filter for water treatment, these were made obsolete by the construction of an impounding reservoir further upstream in 1878, this reservoir, named Cae Llwyd, has a capacity of 11 million US gallons (42,000 m3).

In 1904, demand had again increased, and the company now supplied parts of Cheshire as well as Wrexham. To meet this increased demand, a new, larger reservoir was built, named Ty Mawr (Big House), which opened in 1907. The same Act of Parliament that allowed the construction also authorised the name change of Wrexham Waterworks Company to the Wrexham and East Denbighshire Water Company. The construction of these works also enabled the construction and expansion of the treatment works at Legacy in 1921, as well as the construction of legacy water tower by 1934. Pumps had also been installed at disused mines, notably at Minera Lead Mines, to extract water in times of drought.

Legacy Water Tower

During the 1950s, there was a period of consolidation. The company acquired several other local water supply companies, including those at nearby Ruabon and Brymbo, as well as undertakings previously run by district councils. The company also took possession of the large water extraction works at Sesswick built by the Ministry of Works to supply ROF Wrexham during World War II. In 1983, the expansion of the company dictated that larger offices were required. The headquarters at Egerton Street were sold and the company moved to new, purpose built offices at Packsaddle, Rhostyllen.[1]

Chester Waterworks Company

A water supply system has been present in Chester since Roman times with water taken from the River Dee and small local sources.[2] There certainly appears to have been a well at Christleton to the east of the city in the 14th century [3] and by 1537 records reveal a conduit being built from Broughton to convey water into the City. In 1838 the City of Chester Waterworks company was established inheriting an intake at the causeway - now called Chester Weir and elsewhere in the city. The Chester weir intake remains in use.

Merger

In 1994, the Wrexham and East Denbighshire Water Company was re-organised into a PLC, known as Wrexham Water PLC, and the new parent company Dee Valley Group PLC was established to act as a holding company to the new company. In 1997, the group purchased Chester Waterworks PLC, and over the next year, combined operations from both entities into the current Dee Valley Water PLC. In 2002, Dee Valley Group PLC was listed on the London Stock Exchange with the ticker code DVW.[4]

Operations

Dee Valley Water supplies water for Wrexham and Chester, and some surrounding areas. However the company does not handle water disposal; this is undertaken by Welsh Water, primarily at the Five Fords Wastewater Treatment Works at Marchwiel. Severn Trent Water and United Utilities also treat waste water in smaller areas.

The company abstracts more than 70 million litres of water per day, from six abstraction points; the majority being from two main abstraction points on the River Dee, and less from the companies own reservoirs such as Pendinas Reservoir. Less than a 10th is taken from two underground sources.[5]

This water is treated at six water treatment works, one for each abstraction point:

The treated water is then relayed by gravity and pumps to 31 service reservoirs, and then on to customers.[6]

References

External links