Lyme Regis’ picturesque harbour dates back to the fourteenth century.
Known as The Cobb, it contains a small, sandy beach sheltered by a curving harbour wall.
It’s perfect for fossil hunting.
The map below shows the locations of the storm overflows that have the potential to impact water quality at this bathing water.
The map shows whether or not a storm overflow is currently active, the time and duration of the last spill at that location, and our investment commitments that are specific to that overflow.
The graphs below show the significant reduction in harmful bacteria in the Environment Agency’s (EA) water samples since the 1990s. E. coli and Intestinal Enterococci exist in all open water - they are found in human and animal poo, and get into the water via sewage spills, road drainage, agricultural livestock, or wildlife and birds. The EA uses the levels of these bacteria to decide whether to award this beach bathing water status.
By 2030 we are planning to deliver improvements to all bathing beaches in the region where a storm overflow currently discharges*.
The Cobb pumping station storm overflow is currently the only overflow that may impact Lyme Regis Front Beach.
Other overflows in Lyme Regis may impact Lyme Regis Church Cliff Beach which is not officially a designated bathing water site. Hornbridge pumping station is due to be upgraded by 2024 as part of our ongoing investment programme, to improve resilience and reduce risk of failure at the site.
The 2025-2030 investment programme is currently being scoped out. If you’re a community group or part of a local network and would like to have your say see ‘Your Beach, Your Say, Our Investment’.
*Amounts earmarked for investment may change dependent on the final design of the optimal solution and costings provided by our supply chain.
The data shown in the table below is the reported annual total spill number for each overflow which has been identified by the EA for this bathing water.
The assignment of an overflow to the bathing water does not always mean an impact will occur, it can be dependent on a number of factors such as tidal state and weather conditions. Sometimes it has been allocated just for investigation purposes and has no impact at all.
All data collected goes through vigorous quality assurance processes before being included in the counts. Sometimes debris can trigger false spills to be recorded, resulting in potentially higher than actual spill numbers.
2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
The Cobb pumping station overflow, Lyme Regis | 13 | 9 | 18 | 7 |
The beach profiles were created in line with information provided by our partners, Environment Agency, RNLI, Keep Britain Tidy, MCS - Beach Guide and British Beaches.