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A collol 100-ton “Fetberg ” One has been successfully approved from the West London Sewer, Temes Water Has been revealed.
The utility firm confirmed an expert team spent in a month to remove large -scale blockage, located more than 10 meters from the street level in Feltham.
This solid mass was primarily made up of wet wipes, which accumulates by fat, oil, and grease. The company said that its huge weight was equal to eight double-decar buses.
To deal with the blockage, the team accessed the subtrenian network through a large manhole, equipped with gas monitor for safety.
They then exploded, chisel, and a stubborn material sucking with a stretch of 125 meters of the pipe.
The wasted waste was later cranted in Skip and taken to the landfill.

Alexander Dudfield, the engagement lead for network protection in Temes Water said: “This fatberg’s withdrawal was extremely complex for the engineers of our team and shows some challenges faced by us.
“But while our biggest sewers can weigh more than 25 elephants in our biggest sewer, we should not forget most of the obstacles in local pipes – often narrow and usually due to some homes.
“When these pipes are blocked, we can’t just close the sewage. It comes back and should come out, whether it is from the roads, rivers or even people’s homes. The results can be destructive.”

This comes after the Port of London Authority weeks, local environmental group Tems 21 and Temes Water collaborated by Hammarsith Bridge in West London to remove a bank of a bank in mud on a curve of the Tames River.
The utility company continues to call public members to avoid wet wipes and waste in addition to toilet paper.
Weight wipes are often the cause of obstructions in the sewer network of the Temes Water, the company said it cleans 75,000 obstacles in a year, often caused by wipes, and removes some 3.8 million annually in operations costing £ 18m.
So far this year, Temes Water said that it has cleaned 28,899 RAG blocks, mainly wet wipes, 14,810 fat, oil and grease obstacles and 686 third-party obstacles, made of concrete and other sewer-blocking materials.