London sewer workers race to unclog giant pools of fatty waste ... before they spill into homes
Sewer technicians are fighting a grim war against giant masses of congealed fat which clog the system and threaten to regurgitate putrid waste back into people’s homes.

Every day beneath the streets of London, sewer technicians are fighting a grim war against giant “fatbergs” which clog the system and threaten to regurgitate putrid waste back into people’s homes.
The problem gets worse at Christmas, when two extra Olympic-sized swimming pools of turkey fat are poured down Londoners’ sinks.
Most residents are unaware that their actions help create fatbergs – the nickname for stinking boulders of cooking fat, congealed with everything from wet wipes to sanitary towels and condoms, which block the sewers a few metres below their dining tables.
The problem of congealed fat clogging up Thames Water’s 69,000 kilometres of sewers in London and southeast England is getting worse.
But in the heart of central London, a few hundred metres from Downing Street and Trafalgar Square, the fatberg fightback is on.
The sewers – a confined, pitch-black underworld crawling with flies and worms where staff walk through a deep seam of rotting fat and excrement – are many people’s idea of hell.