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  • World's most picturesque sewage plant
    DUKAS_186644024_FER
    World's most picturesque sewage plant
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Sewage 1
    Ref 16964
    04/07/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Omrania
    Plans have been revealed for what would be the world’s most picturesque sewage treatment plant.
    And the hope is that people will use it as an education resource while the design itself intends to keep smells to a minimum.
    The project , which is now under construction, boasts that it “reframes essential infrastructure as a vital component of the public realm.”
    The water treatment facility is to be built at the southern edge of a park in the Saudi Arabian city of Riyadh.
    It is part of the kingdom’s Saudi Vision 2030 project to transform the oil rich country into a sustainable world tourist destination.
    Located at the King Salman Park, the complex, spanning 137,736 square meters, becomes part of green space's daily life.
    Storage tanks are shaped like giant bowls within planted corridors.
    Above ground, green roofs and shaded pedestrian pathways extend the park’s plant life, supporting biodiversity.
    A spokesperson for architects Omrania said this reinforces the sense that the treatment plant is a living part of the park, “not a hidden utility.”
    The complex consists of sewage and water treatment plus a treated sewage effluent facility.

    OPS: Render of the King Salman Park sewage and water treatment facility,

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • World's most picturesque sewage plant
    DUKAS_186644023_FER
    World's most picturesque sewage plant
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Sewage 1
    Ref 16964
    04/07/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Omrania
    Plans have been revealed for what would be the world’s most picturesque sewage treatment plant.
    And the hope is that people will use it as an education resource while the design itself intends to keep smells to a minimum.
    The project , which is now under construction, boasts that it “reframes essential infrastructure as a vital component of the public realm.”
    The water treatment facility is to be built at the southern edge of a park in the Saudi Arabian city of Riyadh.
    It is part of the kingdom’s Saudi Vision 2030 project to transform the oil rich country into a sustainable world tourist destination.
    Located at the King Salman Park, the complex, spanning 137,736 square meters, becomes part of green space's daily life.
    Storage tanks are shaped like giant bowls within planted corridors.
    Above ground, green roofs and shaded pedestrian pathways extend the park’s plant life, supporting biodiversity.
    A spokesperson for architects Omrania said this reinforces the sense that the treatment plant is a living part of the park, “not a hidden utility.”
    The complex consists of sewage and water treatment plus a treated sewage effluent facility.

    OPS: Render of the King Salman Park sewage and water treatment facility,

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • World's most picturesque sewage plant
    DUKAS_186644022_FER
    World's most picturesque sewage plant
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Sewage 1
    Ref 16964
    04/07/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Omrania
    Plans have been revealed for what would be the world’s most picturesque sewage treatment plant.
    And the hope is that people will use it as an education resource while the design itself intends to keep smells to a minimum.
    The project , which is now under construction, boasts that it “reframes essential infrastructure as a vital component of the public realm.”
    The water treatment facility is to be built at the southern edge of a park in the Saudi Arabian city of Riyadh.
    It is part of the kingdom’s Saudi Vision 2030 project to transform the oil rich country into a sustainable world tourist destination.
    Located at the King Salman Park, the complex, spanning 137,736 square meters, becomes part of green space's daily life.
    Storage tanks are shaped like giant bowls within planted corridors.
    Above ground, green roofs and shaded pedestrian pathways extend the park’s plant life, supporting biodiversity.
    A spokesperson for architects Omrania said this reinforces the sense that the treatment plant is a living part of the park, “not a hidden utility.”
    The complex consists of sewage and water treatment plus a treated sewage effluent facility.

    OPS: Render of the King Salman Park sewage and water treatment facility from the air

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • World's most picturesque sewage plant
    DUKAS_186644021_FER
    World's most picturesque sewage plant
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Sewage 1
    Ref 16964
    04/07/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Omrania
    Plans have been revealed for what would be the world’s most picturesque sewage treatment plant.
    And the hope is that people will use it as an education resource while the design itself intends to keep smells to a minimum.
    The project , which is now under construction, boasts that it “reframes essential infrastructure as a vital component of the public realm.”
    The water treatment facility is to be built at the southern edge of a park in the Saudi Arabian city of Riyadh.
    It is part of the kingdom’s Saudi Vision 2030 project to transform the oil rich country into a sustainable world tourist destination.
    Located at the King Salman Park, the complex, spanning 137,736 square meters, becomes part of green space's daily life.
    Storage tanks are shaped like giant bowls within planted corridors.
    Above ground, green roofs and shaded pedestrian pathways extend the park’s plant life, supporting biodiversity.
    A spokesperson for architects Omrania said this reinforces the sense that the treatment plant is a living part of the park, “not a hidden utility.”
    The complex consists of sewage and water treatment plus a treated sewage effluent facility.

    OPS: Render of the King Salman Park sewage and water treatment facility,

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • World's most picturesque sewage plant
    DUKAS_186644020_FER
    World's most picturesque sewage plant
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Sewage 1
    Ref 16964
    04/07/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Omrania
    Plans have been revealed for what would be the world’s most picturesque sewage treatment plant.
    And the hope is that people will use it as an education resource while the design itself intends to keep smells to a minimum.
    The project , which is now under construction, boasts that it “reframes essential infrastructure as a vital component of the public realm.”
    The water treatment facility is to be built at the southern edge of a park in the Saudi Arabian city of Riyadh.
    It is part of the kingdom’s Saudi Vision 2030 project to transform the oil rich country into a sustainable world tourist destination.
    Located at the King Salman Park, the complex, spanning 137,736 square meters, becomes part of green space's daily life.
    Storage tanks are shaped like giant bowls within planted corridors.
    Above ground, green roofs and shaded pedestrian pathways extend the park’s plant life, supporting biodiversity.
    A spokesperson for architects Omrania said this reinforces the sense that the treatment plant is a living part of the park, “not a hidden utility.”
    The complex consists of sewage and water treatment plus a treated sewage effluent facility.

    OPS: Render of the King Salman Park sewage and water treatment facility,

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • World's most picturesque sewage plant
    DUKAS_186644019_FER
    World's most picturesque sewage plant
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Sewage 1
    Ref 16964
    04/07/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Omrania
    Plans have been revealed for what would be the world’s most picturesque sewage treatment plant.
    And the hope is that people will use it as an education resource while the design itself intends to keep smells to a minimum.
    The project , which is now under construction, boasts that it “reframes essential infrastructure as a vital component of the public realm.”
    The water treatment facility is to be built at the southern edge of a park in the Saudi Arabian city of Riyadh.
    It is part of the kingdom’s Saudi Vision 2030 project to transform the oil rich country into a sustainable world tourist destination.
    Located at the King Salman Park, the complex, spanning 137,736 square meters, becomes part of green space's daily life.
    Storage tanks are shaped like giant bowls within planted corridors.
    Above ground, green roofs and shaded pedestrian pathways extend the park’s plant life, supporting biodiversity.
    A spokesperson for architects Omrania said this reinforces the sense that the treatment plant is a living part of the park, “not a hidden utility.”
    The complex consists of sewage and water treatment plus a treated sewage effluent facility.

    OPS: Render of the King Salman Park sewage and water treatment facility,

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • World's most picturesque sewage plant
    DUKAS_186644018_FER
    World's most picturesque sewage plant
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Sewage 1
    Ref 16964
    04/07/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Omrania
    Plans have been revealed for what would be the world’s most picturesque sewage treatment plant.
    And the hope is that people will use it as an education resource while the design itself intends to keep smells to a minimum.
    The project , which is now under construction, boasts that it “reframes essential infrastructure as a vital component of the public realm.”
    The water treatment facility is to be built at the southern edge of a park in the Saudi Arabian city of Riyadh.
    It is part of the kingdom’s Saudi Vision 2030 project to transform the oil rich country into a sustainable world tourist destination.
    Located at the King Salman Park, the complex, spanning 137,736 square meters, becomes part of green space's daily life.
    Storage tanks are shaped like giant bowls within planted corridors.
    Above ground, green roofs and shaded pedestrian pathways extend the park’s plant life, supporting biodiversity.
    A spokesperson for architects Omrania said this reinforces the sense that the treatment plant is a living part of the park, “not a hidden utility.”
    The complex consists of sewage and water treatment plus a treated sewage effluent facility.

    OPS: Render of the King Salman Park sewage and water treatment facility,

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • World's most picturesque sewage plant
    DUKAS_186644017_FER
    World's most picturesque sewage plant
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Sewage 1
    Ref 16964
    04/07/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Omrania
    Plans have been revealed for what would be the world’s most picturesque sewage treatment plant.
    And the hope is that people will use it as an education resource while the design itself intends to keep smells to a minimum.
    The project , which is now under construction, boasts that it “reframes essential infrastructure as a vital component of the public realm.”
    The water treatment facility is to be built at the southern edge of a park in the Saudi Arabian city of Riyadh.
    It is part of the kingdom’s Saudi Vision 2030 project to transform the oil rich country into a sustainable world tourist destination.
    Located at the King Salman Park, the complex, spanning 137,736 square meters, becomes part of green space's daily life.
    Storage tanks are shaped like giant bowls within planted corridors.
    Above ground, green roofs and shaded pedestrian pathways extend the park’s plant life, supporting biodiversity.
    A spokesperson for architects Omrania said this reinforces the sense that the treatment plant is a living part of the park, “not a hidden utility.”
    The complex consists of sewage and water treatment plus a treated sewage effluent facility.

    OPS: Render of the King Salman Park sewage and water treatment facility,

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • World's most picturesque sewage plant
    DUKAS_186644016_FER
    World's most picturesque sewage plant
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Sewage 1
    Ref 16964
    04/07/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Omrania
    Plans have been revealed for what would be the world’s most picturesque sewage treatment plant.
    And the hope is that people will use it as an education resource while the design itself intends to keep smells to a minimum.
    The project , which is now under construction, boasts that it “reframes essential infrastructure as a vital component of the public realm.”
    The water treatment facility is to be built at the southern edge of a park in the Saudi Arabian city of Riyadh.
    It is part of the kingdom’s Saudi Vision 2030 project to transform the oil rich country into a sustainable world tourist destination.
    Located at the King Salman Park, the complex, spanning 137,736 square meters, becomes part of green space's daily life.
    Storage tanks are shaped like giant bowls within planted corridors.
    Above ground, green roofs and shaded pedestrian pathways extend the park’s plant life, supporting biodiversity.
    A spokesperson for architects Omrania said this reinforces the sense that the treatment plant is a living part of the park, “not a hidden utility.”
    The complex consists of sewage and water treatment plus a treated sewage effluent facility.

    OPS: Render of the King Salman Park sewage and water treatment facility,

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • World's most picturesque sewage plant
    DUKAS_186644015_FER
    World's most picturesque sewage plant
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Sewage 1
    Ref 16964
    04/07/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Omrania
    Plans have been revealed for what would be the world’s most picturesque sewage treatment plant.
    And the hope is that people will use it as an education resource while the design itself intends to keep smells to a minimum.
    The project , which is now under construction, boasts that it “reframes essential infrastructure as a vital component of the public realm.”
    The water treatment facility is to be built at the southern edge of a park in the Saudi Arabian city of Riyadh.
    It is part of the kingdom’s Saudi Vision 2030 project to transform the oil rich country into a sustainable world tourist destination.
    Located at the King Salman Park, the complex, spanning 137,736 square meters, becomes part of green space's daily life.
    Storage tanks are shaped like giant bowls within planted corridors.
    Above ground, green roofs and shaded pedestrian pathways extend the park’s plant life, supporting biodiversity.
    A spokesperson for architects Omrania said this reinforces the sense that the treatment plant is a living part of the park, “not a hidden utility.”
    The complex consists of sewage and water treatment plus a treated sewage effluent facility.

    OPS: Render of the King Salman Park sewage and water treatment facility,

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • World's most picturesque sewage plant
    DUKAS_186644014_FER
    World's most picturesque sewage plant
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Sewage 1
    Ref 16964
    04/07/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Omrania
    Plans have been revealed for what would be the world’s most picturesque sewage treatment plant.
    And the hope is that people will use it as an education resource while the design itself intends to keep smells to a minimum.
    The project , which is now under construction, boasts that it “reframes essential infrastructure as a vital component of the public realm.”
    The water treatment facility is to be built at the southern edge of a park in the Saudi Arabian city of Riyadh.
    It is part of the kingdom’s Saudi Vision 2030 project to transform the oil rich country into a sustainable world tourist destination.
    Located at the King Salman Park, the complex, spanning 137,736 square meters, becomes part of green space's daily life.
    Storage tanks are shaped like giant bowls within planted corridors.
    Above ground, green roofs and shaded pedestrian pathways extend the park’s plant life, supporting biodiversity.
    A spokesperson for architects Omrania said this reinforces the sense that the treatment plant is a living part of the park, “not a hidden utility.”
    The complex consists of sewage and water treatment plus a treated sewage effluent facility.

    OPS: Render of the King Salman Park sewage and water treatment facility,

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • World's most picturesque sewage plant
    DUKAS_186644013_FER
    World's most picturesque sewage plant
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Sewage 1
    Ref 16964
    04/07/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Omrania
    Plans have been revealed for what would be the world’s most picturesque sewage treatment plant.
    And the hope is that people will use it as an education resource while the design itself intends to keep smells to a minimum.
    The project , which is now under construction, boasts that it “reframes essential infrastructure as a vital component of the public realm.”
    The water treatment facility is to be built at the southern edge of a park in the Saudi Arabian city of Riyadh.
    It is part of the kingdom’s Saudi Vision 2030 project to transform the oil rich country into a sustainable world tourist destination.
    Located at the King Salman Park, the complex, spanning 137,736 square meters, becomes part of green space's daily life.
    Storage tanks are shaped like giant bowls within planted corridors.
    Above ground, green roofs and shaded pedestrian pathways extend the park’s plant life, supporting biodiversity.
    A spokesperson for architects Omrania said this reinforces the sense that the treatment plant is a living part of the park, “not a hidden utility.”
    The complex consists of sewage and water treatment plus a treated sewage effluent facility.

    OPS: Render of the King Salman Park sewage and water treatment facility,

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • World's most picturesque sewage plant
    DUKAS_186644011_FER
    World's most picturesque sewage plant
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Sewage 1
    Ref 16964
    04/07/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Omrania
    Plans have been revealed for what would be the world’s most picturesque sewage treatment plant.
    And the hope is that people will use it as an education resource while the design itself intends to keep smells to a minimum.
    The project , which is now under construction, boasts that it “reframes essential infrastructure as a vital component of the public realm.”
    The water treatment facility is to be built at the southern edge of a park in the Saudi Arabian city of Riyadh.
    It is part of the kingdom’s Saudi Vision 2030 project to transform the oil rich country into a sustainable world tourist destination.
    Located at the King Salman Park, the complex, spanning 137,736 square meters, becomes part of green space's daily life.
    Storage tanks are shaped like giant bowls within planted corridors.
    Above ground, green roofs and shaded pedestrian pathways extend the park’s plant life, supporting biodiversity.
    A spokesperson for architects Omrania said this reinforces the sense that the treatment plant is a living part of the park, “not a hidden utility.”
    The complex consists of sewage and water treatment plus a treated sewage effluent facility.

    OPS: Render of the King Salman Park sewage and water treatment facility,

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • World's most picturesque sewage plant
    DUKAS_186644009_FER
    World's most picturesque sewage plant
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Sewage 1
    Ref 16964
    04/07/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Omrania
    Plans have been revealed for what would be the world’s most picturesque sewage treatment plant.
    And the hope is that people will use it as an education resource while the design itself intends to keep smells to a minimum.
    The project , which is now under construction, boasts that it “reframes essential infrastructure as a vital component of the public realm.”
    The water treatment facility is to be built at the southern edge of a park in the Saudi Arabian city of Riyadh.
    It is part of the kingdom’s Saudi Vision 2030 project to transform the oil rich country into a sustainable world tourist destination.
    Located at the King Salman Park, the complex, spanning 137,736 square meters, becomes part of green space's daily life.
    Storage tanks are shaped like giant bowls within planted corridors.
    Above ground, green roofs and shaded pedestrian pathways extend the park’s plant life, supporting biodiversity.
    A spokesperson for architects Omrania said this reinforces the sense that the treatment plant is a living part of the park, “not a hidden utility.”
    The complex consists of sewage and water treatment plus a treated sewage effluent facility.

    OPS: Render of the King Salman Park sewage and water treatment facility,

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Mithi River In Mumbai
    DUKAS_186570033_NUR
    Mithi River In Mumbai
    A man collects recyclable materials from the trash-laden banks of the Mithi River in Mumbai, India, on July 1, 2025. Despite multiple cleanup efforts, the river remains choked with industrial waste, sewage, and plastic debris, highlighting the ongoing environmental and public health challenges in one of India's most populous cities. (Photo by Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto)

     

  • Mithi River In Mumbai
    DUKAS_186570032_NUR
    Mithi River In Mumbai
    A man collects recyclable materials from the trash-laden banks of the Mithi River in Mumbai, India, on July 1, 2025. Despite multiple cleanup efforts, the river remains choked with industrial waste, sewage, and plastic debris, highlighting the ongoing environmental and public health challenges in one of India's most populous cities. (Photo by Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto)

     

  • Mithi River In Mumbai
    DUKAS_186570025_NUR
    Mithi River In Mumbai
    A man collects recyclable materials from the trash-laden banks of the Mithi River in Mumbai, India, on July 1, 2025. Despite multiple cleanup efforts, the river remains choked with industrial waste, sewage, and plastic debris, highlighting the ongoing environmental and public health challenges in one of India's most populous cities. (Photo by Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto)

     

  • Mithi River In Mumbai
    DUKAS_186570024_NUR
    Mithi River In Mumbai
    A man collects recyclable materials from the trash-laden banks of the Mithi River in Mumbai, India, on July 1, 2025. Despite multiple cleanup efforts, the river remains choked with industrial waste, sewage, and plastic debris, highlighting the ongoing environmental and public health challenges in one of India's most populous cities. (Photo by Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto)

     

  • Mithi River In Mumbai
    DUKAS_186570020_NUR
    Mithi River In Mumbai
    A man collects recyclable materials from the trash-laden banks of the Mithi River in Mumbai, India, on July 1, 2025. Despite multiple cleanup efforts, the river remains choked with industrial waste, sewage, and plastic debris, highlighting the ongoing environmental and public health challenges in one of India's most populous cities. (Photo by Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto)

     

  • Mithi River In Mumbai
    DUKAS_186570019_NUR
    Mithi River In Mumbai
    A man wades through the polluted waters of the Mithi River as he collects recyclable waste along its garbage-strewn banks in Mumbai, India, on July 1, 2025. The river, which flows through several densely populated areas of the city, suffers from severe pollution due to unchecked dumping of plastic, sewage, and industrial waste. (Photo by Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto)

     

  • Mithi River In Mumbai
    DUKAS_186570018_NUR
    Mithi River In Mumbai
    A man collects recyclable materials from the trash-laden banks of the Mithi River in Mumbai, India, on July 1, 2025. Despite multiple cleanup efforts, the river remains choked with industrial waste, sewage, and plastic debris, highlighting the ongoing environmental and public health challenges in one of India's most populous cities. (Photo by Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto)

     

  • Mithi River In Mumbai
    DUKAS_186570016_NUR
    Mithi River In Mumbai
    A man collects recyclable materials from the trash-laden banks of the Mithi River in Mumbai, India, on July 1, 2025. Despite multiple cleanup efforts, the river remains choked with industrial waste, sewage, and plastic debris, highlighting the ongoing environmental and public health challenges in one of India's most populous cities. (Photo by Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto)

     

  • Mithi River In Mumbai
    DUKAS_186569991_NUR
    Mithi River In Mumbai
    A man collects recyclable materials from the trash-laden banks of the Mithi River in Mumbai, India, on July 1, 2025. Despite multiple cleanup efforts, the river remains choked with industrial waste, sewage, and plastic debris, highlighting the ongoing environmental and public health challenges in one of India's most populous cities. (Photo by Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto)

     

  • Mithi River In Mumbai
    DUKAS_186569990_NUR
    Mithi River In Mumbai
    A man collects recyclable materials from the trash-laden banks of the Mithi River in Mumbai, India, on July 1, 2025. Despite multiple cleanup efforts, the river remains choked with industrial waste, sewage, and plastic debris, highlighting the ongoing environmental and public health challenges in one of India's most populous cities. (Photo by Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto)

     

  • Mithi River In Mumbai
    DUKAS_186569989_NUR
    Mithi River In Mumbai
    A man collects recyclable materials from the trash-laden banks of the Mithi River in Mumbai, India, on July 1, 2025. Despite multiple cleanup efforts, the river remains choked with industrial waste, sewage, and plastic debris, highlighting the ongoing environmental and public health challenges in one of India's most populous cities. (Photo by Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto)

     

  • Mithi River In Mumbai
    DUKAS_186569988_NUR
    Mithi River In Mumbai
    A man collects recyclable materials from the trash-laden banks of the Mithi River in Mumbai, India, on July 1, 2025. Despite multiple cleanup efforts, the river remains choked with industrial waste, sewage, and plastic debris, highlighting the ongoing environmental and public health challenges in one of India's most populous cities. (Photo by Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto)

     

  • Bathing Beauties Protest At UN Ocean Conference In Nice
    DUKAS_185835797_ZUM
    Bathing Beauties Protest At UN Ocean Conference In Nice
    June 10, 2025, Nice, England, France: Retro-styled performers dubbed the Bathing Beauties stage a beachside tableau titled 'Mer de Merde' or 'Sea of ??Shit'. Their performance disrupts idyllic coastal imagery to reveal the hidden reality of sewage dumping and pollution, timed to confront UNOC delegates in Nice. (Credit Image: © Joao Daniel Pereira/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • Brighton: Protest Against Sewage In Our Seas
    DUKAS_184872559_ZUM
    Brighton: Protest Against Sewage In Our Seas
    May 17, 2025, Brighton, England, UK: A protester wearing a gas mask holds a sign saying 'Sick Of Sewage' during the protest. Surfers Against Sewage (SAS) and their supporters take to the sea to highlight the amount of sewage pumped into Sussex's waterways. National Paddle Out Protests are being held at over 50 locations around the UK. (Credit Image: © Martin Pope/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • Brighton: Protest Against Sewage In Our Seas
    DUKAS_184872550_ZUM
    Brighton: Protest Against Sewage In Our Seas
    May 17, 2025, Brighton, England, UK: A protester carries a surf board with a giant model poo on top walks to the sea during the protest. Surfers Against Sewage (SAS) and their supporters take to the sea to highlight the amount of sewage pumped into Sussex's waterways. National Paddle Out Protests are being held at over 50 locations around the UK. Many of those taking to the sea with suitable protest signs said they had become ill while swimming previously. SAS is a marine conservation charity that works with communities to protect oceans, beaches and marine life. (Credit Image: © Martin Pope/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • Brighton: Protest Against Sewage In Our Seas
    DUKAS_184872540_ZUM
    Brighton: Protest Against Sewage In Our Seas
    May 17, 2025, Brighton, England, UK: Drag artist RUFFLES holds a sign saying 'Stop Pollution For Profit' as they join campaigners on the beach during the protest. Surfers Against Sewage (SAS) and their supporters take to the sea to highlight the amount of sewage pumped into Sussex's waterways. National Paddle Out Protests are being held at over 50 locations around the UK. (Credit Image: © Martin Pope/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • Brighton: Protest Against Sewage In Our Seas
    DUKAS_184872520_ZUM
    Brighton: Protest Against Sewage In Our Seas
    May 17, 2025, Brighton, England, UK: A protester carries a surf board with a giant model poo on top as she walks in to the sea during the protest. Surfers Against Sewage (SAS) and their supporters take to the sea to highlight the amount of sewage pumped into Sussex's waterways. National Paddle Out Protests are being held at over 50 locations around the UK. Many of those taking to the sea with suitable protest signs said they had become ill while swimming previously. SAS is a marine conservation charity that works with communities to protect oceans, beaches and marine life. (Credit Image: © Martin Pope/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • Palestinian children vaccinations
    DUKAS_172746195_POL
    Palestinian children vaccinations
    July 25, 2024 - Gaza: Palestinian children receive periodic medical vaccinations at a health center in the Al-Zawaida area in the central Gaza Strip, on July 25, 2024. Polio has been detected in samples of sewage that is starting to take over Gaza in the grip of a devastating war, health authorities in the Hamas-run territory and Israel said on July 18, where thousands of people live in crowded tent cities of war-displaced. (Omar Ashtawy/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Palestinian children vaccinations
    DUKAS_172746194_POL
    Palestinian children vaccinations
    July 25, 2024 - Gaza: Palestinian children receive periodic medical vaccinations at a health center in the Al-Zawaida area in the central Gaza Strip, on July 25, 2024. Polio has been detected in samples of sewage that is starting to take over Gaza in the grip of a devastating war, health authorities in the Hamas-run territory and Israel said on July 18, where thousands of people live in crowded tent cities of war-displaced. (Omar Ashtawy/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Palestinian children vaccinations
    DUKAS_172746192_POL
    Palestinian children vaccinations
    July 25, 2024 - Gaza: Palestinian children receive periodic medical vaccinations at a health center in the Al-Zawaida area in the central Gaza Strip, on July 25, 2024. Polio has been detected in samples of sewage that is starting to take over Gaza in the grip of a devastating war, health authorities in the Hamas-run territory and Israel said on July 18, where thousands of people live in crowded tent cities of war-displaced. (Omar Ashtawy/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Palestinian children vaccinations
    DUKAS_172746188_POL
    Palestinian children vaccinations
    July 25, 2024 - Gaza: Palestinian children receive periodic medical vaccinations at a health center in the Al-Zawaida area in the central Gaza Strip, on July 25, 2024. Polio has been detected in samples of sewage that is starting to take over Gaza in the grip of a devastating war, health authorities in the Hamas-run territory and Israel said on July 18, where thousands of people live in crowded tent cities of war-displaced. (Omar Ashtawy/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Palestinian children vaccinations
    DUKAS_172746186_POL
    Palestinian children vaccinations
    July 25, 2024 - Gaza: Palestinian children receive periodic medical vaccinations at a health center in the Al-Zawaida area in the central Gaza Strip, on July 25, 2024. Polio has been detected in samples of sewage that is starting to take over Gaza in the grip of a devastating war, health authorities in the Hamas-run territory and Israel said on July 18, where thousands of people live in crowded tent cities of war-displaced. (Omar Ashtawy/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Palestinian children vaccinations
    DUKAS_172746184_POL
    Palestinian children vaccinations
    July 25, 2024 - Gaza: Palestinian children receive periodic medical vaccinations at a health center in the Al-Zawaida area in the central Gaza Strip, on July 25, 2024. Polio has been detected in samples of sewage that is starting to take over Gaza in the grip of a devastating war, health authorities in the Hamas-run territory and Israel said on July 18, where thousands of people live in crowded tent cities of war-displaced. (Omar Ashtawy/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Palestinian children vaccinations
    DUKAS_172746183_POL
    Palestinian children vaccinations
    July 25, 2024 - Gaza: Palestinian children receive periodic medical vaccinations at a health center in the Al-Zawaida area in the central Gaza Strip, on July 25, 2024. Polio has been detected in samples of sewage that is starting to take over Gaza in the grip of a devastating war, health authorities in the Hamas-run territory and Israel said on July 18, where thousands of people live in crowded tent cities of war-displaced. (Omar Ashtawy/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Palestinian children vaccinations
    DUKAS_172746182_POL
    Palestinian children vaccinations
    July 25, 2024 - Gaza: Palestinian children receive periodic medical vaccinations at a health center in the Al-Zawaida area in the central Gaza Strip, on July 25, 2024. Polio has been detected in samples of sewage that is starting to take over Gaza in the grip of a devastating war, health authorities in the Hamas-run territory and Israel said on July 18, where thousands of people live in crowded tent cities of war-displaced. (Omar Ashtawy/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Palestinian children vaccinations
    DUKAS_172746177_POL
    Palestinian children vaccinations
    July 25, 2024 - Gaza: Palestinian children receive periodic medical vaccinations at a health center in the Al-Zawaida area in the central Gaza Strip, on July 25, 2024. Polio has been detected in samples of sewage that is starting to take over Gaza in the grip of a devastating war, health authorities in the Hamas-run territory and Israel said on July 18, where thousands of people live in crowded tent cities of war-displaced. (Omar Ashtawy/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Palestinian children vaccinations
    DUKAS_172746176_POL
    Palestinian children vaccinations
    July 25, 2024 - Gaza: Palestinian children receive periodic medical vaccinations at a health center in the Al-Zawaida area in the central Gaza Strip, on July 25, 2024. Polio has been detected in samples of sewage that is starting to take over Gaza in the grip of a devastating war, health authorities in the Hamas-run territory and Israel said on July 18, where thousands of people live in crowded tent cities of war-displaced. (Omar Ashtawy/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Palestinian children vaccinations
    DUKAS_172746172_POL
    Palestinian children vaccinations
    July 25, 2024 - Gaza: Palestinian children receive periodic medical vaccinations at a health center in the Al-Zawaida area in the central Gaza Strip, on July 25, 2024. Polio has been detected in samples of sewage that is starting to take over Gaza in the grip of a devastating war, health authorities in the Hamas-run territory and Israel said on July 18, where thousands of people live in crowded tent cities of war-displaced. (Omar Ashtawy/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Palestinian children vaccinations
    DUKAS_172746171_POL
    Palestinian children vaccinations
    July 25, 2024 - Gaza: Palestinian children receive periodic medical vaccinations at a health center in the Al-Zawaida area in the central Gaza Strip, on July 25, 2024. Polio has been detected in samples of sewage that is starting to take over Gaza in the grip of a devastating war, health authorities in the Hamas-run territory and Israel said on July 18, where thousands of people live in crowded tent cities of war-displaced. (Omar Ashtawy/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Palestinian children vaccinations
    DUKAS_172746166_POL
    Palestinian children vaccinations
    July 25, 2024 - Gaza: Palestinian children receive periodic medical vaccinations at a health center in the Al-Zawaida area in the central Gaza Strip, on July 25, 2024. Polio has been detected in samples of sewage that is starting to take over Gaza in the grip of a devastating war, health authorities in the Hamas-run territory and Israel said on July 18, where thousands of people live in crowded tent cities of war-displaced. (Omar Ashtawy/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Palestinian children vaccinations
    DUKAS_172746162_POL
    Palestinian children vaccinations
    July 25, 2024 - Gaza: Palestinian children receive periodic medical vaccinations at a health center in the Al-Zawaida area in the central Gaza Strip, on July 25, 2024. Polio has been detected in samples of sewage that is starting to take over Gaza in the grip of a devastating war, health authorities in the Hamas-run territory and Israel said on July 18, where thousands of people live in crowded tent cities of war-displaced. (Omar Ashtawy/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Palestinian children vaccinations
    DUKAS_172746158_POL
    Palestinian children vaccinations
    July 25, 2024 - Gaza: Palestinian children receive periodic medical vaccinations at a health center in the Al-Zawaida area in the central Gaza Strip, on July 25, 2024. Polio has been detected in samples of sewage that is starting to take over Gaza in the grip of a devastating war, health authorities in the Hamas-run territory and Israel said on July 18, where thousands of people live in crowded tent cities of war-displaced. (Omar Ashtawy/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Palestinian children vaccinations
    DUKAS_172746156_POL
    Palestinian children vaccinations
    July 25, 2024 - Gaza: Palestinian children receive periodic medical vaccinations at a health center in the Al-Zawaida area in the central Gaza Strip, on July 25, 2024. Polio has been detected in samples of sewage that is starting to take over Gaza in the grip of a devastating war, health authorities in the Hamas-run territory and Israel said on July 18, where thousands of people live in crowded tent cities of war-displaced. (Omar Ashtawy/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • Palestinian children vaccinations
    DUKAS_172746138_POL
    Palestinian children vaccinations
    July 25, 2024 - Gaza: Palestinian children receive periodic medical vaccinations at a health center in the Al-Zawaida area in the central Gaza Strip, on July 25, 2024. Polio has been detected in samples of sewage that is starting to take over Gaza in the grip of a devastating war, health authorities in the Hamas-run territory and Israel said on July 18, where thousands of people live in crowded tent cities of war-displaced. (Omar Ashtawy/APAImages/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    apaimages

     

  • No swimming, no surfing: how a summer of sewage is ruining the British seaside day out.
    DUKAS_157113893_EYE
    No swimming, no surfing: how a summer of sewage is ruining the British seaside day out.
    Red flags are going up on beaches from Scarborough to Whitstable as pollution levels soar and businesses are forced to close due to sewage discharges.

    Yorkshire Water says it has spent more than £100m in recent years improving local processing facilities.

    Meanwhile, the sewage keeps coming. A massive discharge near Blackpool on Tuesday comes after 69,000 such events last year across the UK’s north-west from United Utilities. Yet the company still found the money to pay £300m in dividends to shareholders.

    MICHELLE BUCKLY , who organises the Swim Blast sunset sea swimming group, on the beach in Blackpool . Blackpool Council have said that swimmers should not swim at beaches along its coast after raw sewage was released in to the Irish Sea , reportedly as a consequence of a storm , earlier this week
    15/06/2023. Lancashire, UK.

    © Joel Goodman / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • No swimming, no surfing: how a summer of sewage is ruining the British seaside day out.
    DUKAS_157114059_EYE
    No swimming, no surfing: how a summer of sewage is ruining the British seaside day out.
    Red flags are going up on beaches from Scarborough to Whitstable as pollution levels soar and businesses are forced to close due to sewage discharges.

    Yorkshire Water says it has spent more than £100m in recent years improving local processing facilities.

    Meanwhile, the sewage keeps coming. A massive discharge near Blackpool on Tuesday comes after 69,000 such events last year across the UK’s north-west from United Utilities. Yet the company still found the money to pay £300m in dividends to shareholders.

    MICHELLE BUCKLY , who organises the Swim Blast sunset sea swimming group, on the beach in Blackpool . Blackpool Council have said that swimmers should not swim at beaches along its coast after raw sewage was released in to the Irish Sea , reportedly as a consequence of a storm , earlier this week
    15/06/2023. Lancashire, UK.

    © Joel Goodman / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

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