The Imperial Gallon is still alive in Ireland. See below.

400,000 septic tanks a 'threat to groundwater'
Frank McDonald

Rural housing: Ireland now has an estimated 400,000 septic tanks dealing
with 50 million gallons of effluent every day and these represent a "huge
threat to groundwater", according to a director of the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA).
Mr Larry Stapleton was speaking at a press conference yesterday on the
publication of an EPA review of the state of Ireland's environment, which
stresses the need for septic tanks to be properly installed and maintained.
"Providing that guidance on both single house treatment systems and
groundwater protection is followed, the EPA is satisfied that septic tanks
and their associated percolation areas will provide adequate protection to
groundwater," the review states.
But with one-off houses in the countryside now accounting for nearly 40 per
cent of the record annual output of 68,500 new homes, the review highlights
other downsides in terms of increased transport costs and lower
accessibility to services.
The proliferation of housing in rural areas also had a negative impact on
the urban fabric of towns and could lead to degradation of the landscape,
habitat fragmentation and overall negative impacts on Ireland's
biodiversity, it says.
The review notes the publication in March by the Minister for the
Environment, Mr Cullen, of new guidelines on rural housing, which are
expected to usher in a more liberal regime favouring people with "local
links" for planning permission.
Asked at yesterday's press conference whether Ireland's current pattern of
housing development was inherently unsustainable, the EPA's director
general, Dr Mary Kelly, said this was "a planning issue and I don't want to
stray into the planning area".

� The Irish Times

Han
Historian of Dutch Metrication, Nijmegen, The Netherlands

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