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Gritting salt stocks at Southampton docks 'could be wasted' | Gritting salt stocks at Southampton docks 'could be wasted' |
(35 minutes later) | |
A hundred thousand tonnes of road-gritting salt at Southampton docks thought to be worth millions of pounds could go to waste, the AA has claimed. | |
The salt was imported from Australia in the winter of 2010-11 when demand across Europe had pushed up prices. | |
Prices have since fallen and the AA has warned the salt, which has been uncovered for more than a year, could deteriorate before it can be sold on. | |
The Highways Agency has not commented but said a statement would be released. | |
BBC South's transport correspondent Paul Clifton said an industry source had told him the salt in Southampton is for sale to councils at £65 a tonne, plus delivery costs. | |
The country requires a stockpile of salt large enough to cope with an unexpectedly harsh winter. | |
You will remember a couple of years ago parts of the country were running out during a cold snap - there wasn't enough available to grit all the roads. | |
The question is whether that stockpile has been well managed, and at what cost to the taxpayer? | |
The industry thinks it is a good thing that we now have more than a year's supply of salt in reserve for gritting the roads. But as everyone knows from keeping table salt at home, it has to be looked after properly. | |
But fresh salt can be imported for £45 a tonne including delivery and the main salt mine in Cheshire will supply it for £32 a tonne, he added. | |
The source told the BBC the salt will only last for three or four years before it decays, even if it is covered. | |
It is currently stored at Southampton's Western Docks, which is believed to be costing the agency hundreds of thousands of pounds each year in payments to dock owners Associated British Ports. | |
AA spokesman Paul Watters praised the agency for stepping in to buy the salt upfront at a time of crisis, but said the wet weather since then could cause the pile of salt, which has only recently been covered, to deteriorate. | |
"Having got it, we have to make sure we use the asset we've got - we need to make sure it is in the right place, in the right condition. | "Having got it, we have to make sure we use the asset we've got - we need to make sure it is in the right place, in the right condition. |
"I'd hate to think we'd have to ditch this stuff if it is no good." | "I'd hate to think we'd have to ditch this stuff if it is no good." |