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Openreach UK Warn Surrey Petrol Leak to Take At Least 1 Year to Fix

Monday, Jul 29th, 2024 (12:22 pm) - Score 8,840
Openreach-Bramley-Fuel-Leak-Map-Area

Network access provider Openreach (BT) has issued another update on a long-running underground petrol leak in the Surrey village of Bramley, which has already restricted the ability to safely work on their local broadband ISP and phone network. The bad news today is that “making [this] network safe and accessible” could now take “at least 12 months“.

In case anybody missed our last report in early June 2024 (here). Openreach is currently dealing with the “significant and ongoing impact” of the incident, which technically began 2 year ago after fuel started leaking from the local ASDA Petrol Station. But over the course of that time this leak has begun to cause fuel smells in the area, harming local businesses, and has also spread into the groundwater (i.e. no drinking of tap water in certain areas) and even local utility services.

NOTE: Openreach previously measured the petrol in their network to be above the “Lower Explosive Limit” (i.e. an ignition source could lead to an explosion within underground ducts).

At least 300 metres of their underground cable ducts in the area have been affected and cleaning it up will involve specialist equipment, processes and lots of detailed coordination amongst the affected organisations and relevant authorities. For example, they’ve already begun to work alongside Thames Water and others to extract vapour and fuel from their network, and the surrounding groundwater.

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At the time of our last update, Openreach had notified retail broadband and phone providers on their network that the dangers involved meant that the problem was likely to affect their local work and services for “several months“. Naturally, it’s unsafe for their engineers to access the network until the risk is eliminated, and they’re “proceeding with extreme caution“.

Put another way, this means that they “won’t be able to fix every issue that’s reported to us” (many can be resolved remotely, but some cannot). “In these cases, we’ll be working with Communications Providers to provide alternative and temporary services until we can – for example via a mobile/wireless signal,” said Openreach (e.g. they’ve made space available in their Bramley exchange car park for providers to erect temporary mobile masts).

The fact that no physical service repairs, engineering work, fault management, end customer provision or fibre (FTTP) build can take place (i.e. at least until the immediate explosion risk is mitigated) is naturally very disruptive, and some customers will no doubt be caught out. But the latest update indicates that the clean-up work could take a very long time (also see the local council updates).

Openreach Statement (29th July 2024)

We’ve appointed environmental experts to extract vapour and fuel from our network, and the surrounding ground water, over a period of several months and this work has already begun.

Once that’s completed, we’ll need to clean the ducts and rectify any residual damage to the chambers and our cables before we can return to business as usual.

Because of the complexity safety concerns, we’ve been advised that making our network safe and accessible could take at least 12 months, but we’ll continue to update our people, partners, customers and residents on this web page as work progresses.

In the end, it remains VERY important to remember just how extraordinarily dangerous this situation is and, given the complexity of the problem, it’s not surprising that it could take a long time to resolve. Behind the scenes, there is a massive multi-organisation effort going on to tackle this and nobody is taking it for granted. We can only hope that it’s able to be safely resolved sooner, rather than later. But that reference to “at least 12 months” above may yet turn out to be optimistic.

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Mark-Jackson
By Mark Jackson
Mark is a professional technology writer, IT consultant and computer engineer from Dorset (England), he also founded ISPreview in 1999 and enjoys analysing the latest telecoms and broadband developments. Find me on X (Twitter), Mastodon, Facebook, BlueSky, Threads.net and .
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20 Responses

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  1. Avatar photo Billy Shears says:

    I hope ASDA are picking up the bill.

  2. Avatar photo John Proton says:

    I imagine people stood around each scratching their head and wondering what to do.

    1. Avatar photo Me says:

      And running their chins stating ‘oooh this is gonna cost ya’.

    2. Avatar photo The withcher says:

      Having a “fag”

  3. Avatar photo Big Dave says:

    Me thinks Asda (or its insurers) are going to end up with a rather large bill at the end of this.

  4. Avatar photo DaveP says:

    Apparently the leak was discovered by ASDA in the tanks after they took over the forecourt. So previous operator is to blame, but no doubt they’re dead or bankrupt !

    1. Avatar photo Tom says:

      Going by Street View
      April 2010 – BP branding
      April 2021 – Esso Branding
      June 2023 – co-op branding

    2. Avatar photo Tony says:

      You’re right, it was a Co-Op garage, Asda bought it in October last year.

  5. Avatar photo Jamie D says:

    Absolute disgrace. 2 years of fuel leaking. The eco-warriors are going to love this.
    Just burn it off LOL!!

  6. Avatar photo Just a thought says:

    Broadband with a whooooosh..,.

    Pity the poor OR engineers, bet that’s not something on their usual daily risk assessment.

    Each week tanker unload, say, 3000litres, each week PoS registers 2900 litres of sales….. How long does that need to go on before Simone twigs? There’s going to be a bit of evaporation, but surely that would be a fairly average amount for all forecourts.

    1. Avatar photo André says:

      I would imagine the leak would have been small enough for the values to get lost in the “noise” (presumably they dispense tens of thousands of litres every week), but big enough to cause these problems over a period of God knows how many years….

    2. Avatar photo Meadmodj says:

      Similar issue to other industries (sewage, water, utility installation in carriageway etc). Independent inspection (physical and records) is no longer there, understaffed or unqualified.

      The Petroleum Acts cover this which is why so many small local garages have closed over the years. (Old contaminated tanks can remain buried).Many forecourts are revamped but their tanks can date back a lot further. The issue here is they can pump out the network but as soon as it rains it surfaces again. So its the contaminated source that needs to be addressed.

      Too much of the essential things in our life are only checked or monitored at a cosmetic level.

    3. Avatar photo MilesT says:

      Also you need to allow for the fact that petrol (and to a lesser extent diesel) expands/contracts with temperature (more than water does).

      There are standard calculations based on temperature rise but you need to actually measure the temperature of the delivery.

  7. Avatar photo ChrisD says:

    These cars that need to burn highly flammable liquid will never catch on 😉

  8. Avatar photo Ed says:

    In Openreach’s defence, this really isn’t their fault. Here’s hoping it can be rectified soon.

  9. Avatar photo Ben says:

    How long does it take to put up a few poles?

    1. Avatar photo Steve says:

      But then we’d just be getting an article about people moaning about poles outside their house..

  10. Avatar photo Nick Roberts says:

    Don’t go to Diego Garcia or Bermuda for your holidays.

  11. Avatar photo DavepP says:

    The petrol leak affecting Openreach was nothing to the people of Bramley that had 6 weeks of DO NOT TOUCH THE MAINS WATER order.

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