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Fly Tippers Wreak Millions in Damage at Critical UK Substation
19 Jan
Summary
- Underground electrical cables near a key substation were damaged.
- The incident caused millions of pounds in repair costs.
- Nine months of work were needed to fix the damage.

An act of fly tipping has resulted in millions of pounds of damage after underground electrical cables near the Walham substation were disturbed. This critical site supplies power to approximately half a million homes and the headquarters of GCHQ in Gloucestershire. The incident, which occurred last March, necessitated nine months of intensive repair work.
The unauthorised digging affected four of the five essential cables linked to the substation. This site is considered so vital to Britain's energy supply that it was the subject of a Cobra meeting in 2007 due to flood risks. Fortunately, GCHQ maintains backup generators, mitigating immediate operational impact.
This incident is part of a wider problem of extensive fly tipping in the surrounding countryside, with multiple illegal waste sites identified. Investigations are ongoing with the local council and the Environment Agency to address the illegal waste deposits and the extensive environmental damage.



