Bottled water stations have been opened in Surrey as residents were left without water due to a technical issue on one of the hottest days of the year.
Many residents woke up to a diminished water supply or low pressure in their taps due to complications at Netley Mill water treatment works, which serves 8,500 properties in Cranleigh and surrounding villages.
Thames Water said it was doing everything it could to resume supplies, but in the meantime had set up three hubs at which local people could pick up bottled water, and would open more if there was demand for it.
<p lang=«en» dir=«ltr» xml:lang=«en»>Scenes at Cranleigh Village Way car park this morning as @thameswater distributes emergency bottled water supplies. @surreylive @BBCSurrey pic.twitter.com/NpZW2qL1KsIt advised that the supplies were for “essential use, like drinking, cooking, and hand washing” and urged people to be considerate, taking only what they needed.
“If you have a neighbour who’s unable to get to a water station, please let us know and we’ll do our best to make sure our limited supplies are fairly handed out,” it added in a statement.
Jeremy Hunt, the MP for South West Surrey, said he had “big concerns” over the water outage, and had contacted Thames Water’s chief executive, Sarah Bentley, on Saturday morning.
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Households across postcodes GU5, GU6, RH4, RH5 and RH12 have been affected by the issue, which came one day after a drought was officially declared in eight regions in England.
Welsh Water, Southern Water and South East Water have all imposed hosepipe bans, while Yorkshire Water’s restrictions will be introduced on 26
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