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Home » Does pouring coffee down the drain really harm the environment? Scientists reveal the truth
Technology

Does pouring coffee down the drain really harm the environment? Scientists reveal the truth

By staffOctober 23, 20255 Mins Read
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Does pouring coffee down the drain really harm the environment? Scientists reveal the truth
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Scientists have warned pouring coffee down the gutter is bad for the environment – afer a woman in west London was charged £150 for dumping her dregs in a public road gully. 

Burcu Yesilyurt, from Kew, west London, was fined under Section 33 of the Environmental Protection Act, which prohibits disposing of waste in ‘a manner likely to pollute water or land’.

Richmond–upon–Thames Council now says it has cancelled the fine. 

However, speaking to the Daily Mail, scientists say there is good reason to avoid dumping out your coffee.

Unlike the sink in your home, many surface water drains lead directly to local rivers and streams without treatment.

While a single coffee might not seem like a massive problem, if lots of people tip away a little bit of liquid, the combined impact could prove problematic. 

Depending on the type, coffee can not only block drains, but can prove fatal for fish living in local waterways.  

Michael Burrows, director of MZR Drainage, told Daily Mail: ‘It might seem harmless, but when thousands of people do it regularly, the environmental impact quickly adds up.’

Burcu Yesilyurt (pictured) was slapped with a £150 fine by council officers after pouring the remnants of her coffee down the drain. But scientists say there is good reason to avoid ditching your coffee 

By itself, black coffee doesn’t contain many pollutants that can cause destructive impacts to the environment.

Caffeine can be toxic to aquatic ecosystems at concentrations of around 1.2 micrograms per litre, which is highly unlikely to come from the dregs of a coffee.

But, if you’re partial to a cappuccino or a pumpkin spice latte, the potential impact can be much greater.

Mr Burrows says: ‘Pouring coffee or other liquids into public drains can have more of an impact than people realise.

‘Even though milk is a natural product, it can be highly polluting when it enters waterways.’

When milk and sugar enter the waterways, bacteria feed on these natural products and start to break them down, using up oxygen in the process.

Professor Gary Fones, an aquatic chemistry expert from the University of Portsmouth, told Daily Mail: ‘Milk has a very high Biological Oxygen Demand (BOD), way more than sewage. 

‘It can be as much as 400 times more polluting than untreated domestic sewage.

Scientists say there would need to be a 'catastrophic' amount of milk to cause serious damage. An event on this scale occurred in 2021 when a milk tanker tipped into the River Dulais in Llanwrda, Carmarthenshire (pictured)

Scientists say there would need to be a ‘catastrophic’ amount of milk to cause serious damage. An event on this scale occurred in 2021 when a milk tanker tipped into the River Dulais in Llanwrda, Carmarthenshire (pictured)

‘Naturally occurring bacteria break down milk entering a watercourse, using up oxygen in the water more quickly than it can be replaced. 

‘As a result of falling oxygen levels, fish and other creatures can suffocate.’

Earlier this month, Scottish Water was forced to warn households against dumping milk down the drains due to the environmental risks.

However, Professor Fones points out that it would require a ‘catastrophic’ input of milk, such as an overturned tanker, to cause serious disruption to the ecosystem.

He adds: ‘One cup in a drain in Richmond is a drop in the Thames compared to Thames Water.’

The other issue with dumping coffee down the public drains is that it can lead to blockages.

‘While liquids seem harmless, coffee grounds, milk, and sugar residues can build up inside drains and act like glue for other debris,’ Mr Burrows said. 

‘This leads to slow–running drains, bad smells, and even full blockages. In our line of work, we see this a lot in cafés and offices where people regularly tip waste liquids down outside drains.’

Coffee grounds and milk act like glue, which holds together fats and other substances that contribute towards blockages (stock image)

Coffee grounds and milk act like glue, which holds together fats and other substances that contribute towards blockages (stock image) 

In severe cases, fats from milk and other sources come together to form fatbergs. These huge collections of oils, plastic, and waste can grow to be over 100 tonnes. Pictured: Technicians remove a fatberg beneath Regent Street, London

In severe cases, fats from milk and other sources come together to form fatbergs. These huge collections of oils, plastic, and waste can grow to be over 100 tonnes. Pictured: Technicians remove a fatberg beneath Regent Street, London 

The fats in milk can also leave behind a greasy film that coats the inside of pipes, especially when combined with other waste materials.

Over time, this can contribute to the formation of blockages or even the dreaded ‘fatbergs’ that cause so many issues for sewers in big cities.

These collections of oils, fats, plastics, and other waste can grow to weigh hundreds of tonnes.

The largest ever found in London stretched for 250 metres and weighed 130 tonnes – as much as two Airbus A318 aircraft.

Even though the milk in your coffee isn’t going to make a fatberg by itself, thousands of commuters all tipping away their coffee every day makes blockages more likely.

However, it is important to note that a milky coffee is far less likely to cause a blockage than some other items people flush or improperly dispose of – including wet wipes. 

‘The real story here is the amount of toxic chemicals that end up in our waterways and sewage system from roads – microplastics, metals, tyre compounds – not coffee down drains,’ Professor Fones added. 

WHAT ARE FATBERGS?

Fatbergs are blockages made up of flushed fat, oil, grease and other flushed waste such as wet wipes and illegal drugs.

They form into huge concrete-like slabs and can be found beneath almost every UK city, growing larger with every flush.

They also include food wrappers and human waste, blocking tunnels – and raising the risk of sewage flooding into homes.

Cooking fat is biggest contributor to Britain’s fatbergs, making up nearly 90% of the sample

The biggest ever discovered in the UK was a 750-metre (2,460ft) monster found under London’s South Bank in 2017 (pictured) 

They can grow metres tall and hundreds of metres long, with water providers last year declaring an epidemic of fatberg emergencies in 23 UK cities, costing tens of millions of pounds to remove.

The biggest ever discovered in the UK was a 750-metre (2,460ft) monster found under London’s South Bank in 2017. 

Fatbergs take weeks to remove and form when people put things they shouldn’t down sinks and toilets.

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