Anglian Water is urging residents to bin their cooking waste this Christmas as more than 250 tonnes of turkey fat could enter the region's sewers. The company currently spends £19 million annually clearing around 40,000 blockages in East Anglia.
Why it matters: The disposal of cooking fats during the festive period can lead to flooding in homes and streets. According to Anglian Water, 80% of these blockages could be prevented through different disposal methods.
The big picture: The water company estimates more than one million turkeys will be eaten in their region over Christmas, with each producing about three-quarters of a pint of fat. This equates to around 250 tonnes of fat – comparable to one million blocks of butter – potentially entering the drainage system.
Fat poured down sinks as a warm liquid cools and hardens in pipes, coating sewer walls and restricting water flowAnglian Water
How it works: Fat poured down sinks as a warm liquid cools and hardens in pipes, coating sewer walls and restricting water flow. The company says this combines with other incorrectly disposed items like wipes, cotton buds and sanitary products, leading to blockages.
What they're saying: "On average, we clear one blockage once every 15 minutes due to the amount of fats, oils and greases that find their way into our region's sewers," says Molly McKie from Anglian Water. She adds that if flooding occurs on private property, homeowners could face repair costs.
What's new: The company reports installing more than 32,000 new monitors in parts of their sewer network they consider vulnerable, particularly in pipes prone to blockages.
The bottom line: While blockages and flooding remain a concern during the festive period, residents can prevent issues by disposing of cooking waste in bins rather than down drains.
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Electronic music event WREKT has established itself as more than just another night out, offering a platform that honours the rich cultural heritage of jungle and DnB while showcasing both legendary pioneers and emerging talent.
A recontextualisation of electronic music
The resurgence of electronic music in recent years marks a return to the forefront of global music culture. With more and more events popping up around the UK, this doesn't just feel like a nostalgic reminiscence of electronic music (and its sister genres), but rather a recontextualisation of electronic music within a modern framework. It feels inspired.
Mixing and MCing has always been about storytelling. WREKT is an electronic event, having organised three events, prioritising DnB and jungle sets from globally renowned DJs, such as Fabio who played at the most recent event, and emerging underground talent.
WREKT at The Baths in IpswichFaith Hussain
A brief history of DnB and jungle music
In the early 90s, the sound of jungle fused with heavy breakbeat to form DnB. Fabio & Grooverider were some of the first DJs to transform classic jungle beats into jungle drum'n'bass. Their weekly Thursday night sets, 'Rage', at Heaven in London, blended genres like house, acid, and techno into one, inspiring experimentation and the formation of completely new sounds. Fabio & Grooverider are the godfathers of DnB, (Mixmag, 2019). Without their avant-garde approach to music, drum and bass would never have evolved.
As well as a form of musical expression, DnB (and Jungle) was a direct response to social and economic disenfranchisement, offering a space for expression, especially for Black British youth. Both jungle and DnB were formed from the sounds that the Windrush community brought with them in the 1940s onwards.
The Windrush connection
Post WWII, the United Kingdom faced a severe labour shortage, thus inviting citizens of the Commonwealth to Britain to help rebuild. Many Caribbean people answered this call and migrated aboard HMS Windrush; however, they faced a hostile environment upon arrival with long-term racism, colour bars, police brutality and alienation.
Included in this marginalisation was the musical output of the Windrush generation, whose impact on British society and the multiple genres of music we know and love today often goes completely unrecognised.
Jungle was born from despair. It was a form of cultural expression for London's lower-class urban youth. The post-Thatcherite United Kingdom of the early 1990s had left many young people feeling disillusioned and negative about their futures. Jungle acted as an output to reflect these feelings too.
In the 90s, pirate radios such as Kool FM, and raves, were extremely important for the spread of DnB and jungle and allowing DJS and MCS to make themselves known.
WREKT at The Baths in IpswichFaith Hussain
A continuation and development of the roots sound
Speaking to RedEye Records, a co-host of WREKT, they explained that "What we are listening to now is a continuation and development of the roots sound, which in turn borrowed from other adjacent sounds… Wrekt is a mix of DJs, MCs, sound system, venue and ravers. In each of these aspects we aim to always bring the best."
WREKT aims to give equal voice to known DJs and MCs as well as up-and-coming ones. These sounds are, refreshingly, being spread in person, through word of mouth, and through events like WREKT.
WREKT was a brilliant amalgamation of soundsystem culture, the development of roots sounds of jungle and DnB, and people of all ages coming together to appreciate this music as well as the just as important historical context of it. The 90-minute set of soulful jungle flavours from Jet Li and Response was just perfect for those (like myself) who prefer a bit more of a funk/dub-inspired sound to lead into a more Dnb-heavy night.
More than a night out
Fabio was mindblowing to see live. His ability to blend grooves with heavy basslines felt nostalgic but fresh. As one of the originators of the genre, along with Grooverider, he helped shape the entire sonic landscape of drum and bass from its earliest days; it was insane to see such a pioneer in the flesh. His set was ecstatic and had everyone bouncing on the dance floor.
I also really appreciated female DJs being included, like DJ Angelle. Historian Julia Toppin suggests that the history of jungle and DnB was told predominantly from a white-male perspective (Toppin, 2022). It's so refreshing to see equally talented Black female DJs be given the space and limelight to grow their following. I've found that unfortunately a lot of women in music, specifically male-dominated genres like electronic music, are often seen not for who they are or what they bring, but in contrast to men — as the "other" or simply the opposite of a male artist, rather than being recognised on their own terms.
WREKT is not just a night out – it's a reminder of the roots, resilience, and evolution of a rich musical scene.
"Anything with true value sticks around once established for good reasons" – RedEye Records, 2025