Oil, fat and condoms: Monster fatberg blocks Whitechapel sewer

Blackleaf

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A 250-metre long fatberg weighing 130 tonnes has been found blocking a sewer.

The solid mass of congealed fat, wet wipes, nappies, oil and condoms formed in the Victorian-era tunnel in Whitechapel, London.

Thames Water described it as one of the largest it had seen and said it would take three weeks to remove.

'Monster' fatberg found blocking east London sewer


BBC News
12th September 2017

A 250-metre long fatberg weighing 130 tonnes has been found blocking a sewer.

The solid mass of congealed fat, wet wipes, nappies, oil and condoms formed in the Victorian-era tunnel in Whitechapel, London.

Thames Water described it as one of the largest it had seen and said it would take three weeks to remove.

The company's head of waste networks Matt Rimmer said: "It's a total monster and taking a lot of manpower and machinery to remove as it's set hard."

The company says fatbergs form when people put things they shouldn't down sinks and toilets.


The fatberg had blocked the sewer in Whitechapel

"It's basically like trying to break up concrete," Mr Rimmer said.

"It's frustrating as these situations are totally avoidable and caused by fat, oil and grease being washed down sinks and wipes flushed down the loo.

"The sewers are not an abyss for household rubbish and our message to everyone is clear - please bin it - don't block it."

The fatberg is about as heavy as 11 double decker buses.



Work at Whitechapel Road to remove the immense fatberg started this week.

Eight workers will break up the mass with high-pressure hoses, suck up the pieces into tankers and take it to a recycling site in Stratford.

In 2013, Thames Water found a bus-size fatberg in a sewer in Kingston-upon-Thames.


Eight workers will break up the mass with high-pressure hoses

'Monster' fatberg found blocking east London sewer - BBC News
 

spaminator

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Museum trying to acquire huge ‘fatberg’ clogging London sewer
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Wednesday, September 13, 2017 09:16 AM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, September 13, 2017 09:24 AM EDT
London’s monster fatberg may be destined for a museum.
The Museum of London says it is trying to acquire a chunk of the 130 metric ton (143 U.S. ton) mass of oil, fat, diapers and baby wipes currently clogging one of the city’s Victorian sewers.
Utility company Thames Water is trying to dislodge the smelly blob, which is 250 metres (820 feet) long, by breaking it up with high-powered hoses. They say the process could take weeks.
Museum director Sharon Ament said Wednesday that adding the fatberg to its collection “would raise questions about how we live today and also inspire our visitors to consider solutions to the problems of growing metropolises.”
The museum hopes to obtain a cross-section of the fatberg. It hasn’t decided how it would be displayed.
Museum trying to acquire huge
 

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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Museum trying to acquire huge ‘fatberg’ clogging London sewer
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Wednesday, September 13, 2017 09:16 AM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, September 13, 2017 09:24 AM EDT
London’s monster fatberg may be destined for a museum.
The Museum of London says it is trying to acquire a chunk of the 130 metric ton (143 U.S. ton) mass of oil, fat, diapers and baby wipes currently clogging one of the city’s Victorian sewers.
Utility company Thames Water is trying to dislodge the smelly blob, which is 250 metres (820 feet) long, by breaking it up with high-powered hoses. They say the process could take weeks.
Museum director Sharon Ament said Wednesday that adding the fatberg to its collection “would raise questions about how we live today and also inspire our visitors to consider solutions to the problems of growing metropolises.”
The museum hopes to obtain a cross-section of the fatberg. It hasn’t decided how it would be displayed.
Museum trying to acquire huge

It's a perfect piece for the Museum of London. The museum has all sorts of exhibits on London life, from 450,000BC to the present day. It has the remains of hippos which lived at what is now Trafalgar Square 125,000 years ago as well as Roman artefacts, medieval artefacts, Tudor and Stuart artefacts, artefacts from the eighteenth century and Victoria Era, and artefacts from the 1950s to the 2010s. So a piece of fatberg would be ideal to stick in the section of the museum showing life in London today.