Rotting material set to be removed from damaged Christchurch wastewater plant

"At least we now have clear timeframes on when the work will be completed."
"At least we now have clear timeframes on when the work will be completed." Photo credit: Image - Newshub

By RNZ

The rotting material inside Christchurch's fire-damaged wastewater plant will start to be removed from tomorrow.

Since the fire in November last year, residents across the city have been subject to a horrendous smell - so bad in nearby suburbs, it has given people headaches, insomnia and itchy eyes.

Christchurch City Council has today announced Southern Demolition and Salvage Limited will carry out the job.

The council's head of Three Waters, Helen Beaumont, said crews would be working 12 hours a day, six days a week to get the job done by September - three months earlier than expected.

"Southern Demolition undertook the trial removal of the material for us in December 2021 so they are aware of the huge job ahead of them. They are going to pull out all the stops to complete the removal work as quickly as possible," she said.

"It's a complex task as the trickling filters have eight metre-high (three-storey) concrete walls and there is about 26,000 cubic metres - about the volume of 10 Olympic swimming pools - of material to remove."

Normally, the council would look for tenders for a project of this size, but the impact on local communities caused the council to make a direct appointment, she said.

But Beaumont warned the putrid odour may get worse before it gets better.

"Unfortunately, there are days when the smell could get worse as material deep inside the trickling filters gets exposed to the elements and starts rotting.

"We know this is the last thing that residents want to hear but at least we now have clear timeframes on when the work will be completed."

The cost of removing the material from the trickling filters will be funded from an interim insurance payment the council has received.

The material will be loaded into sealed bins and transported to the Kate Valley landfill where it will be treated as hazardous waste.