The water demands of North West
England including
Liverpool and
the Wirral far exceed the locally available sources of clean water. The
River Dee runs mainly in
North Wales before flowing through
Chester, England, and then returning to Wales in a man-made channel constructed to gain land from the
Dee Estuary. The Dee is the largest relatively clean river left near to the North West
conurbation and without water from the Dee much of
Liverpool would be without water, unless local rivers such as the Mersey were rehabilitated. However, the natural flow of the River Dee during most summers is insufficient to sustain any significant abstractions. To overcome this problem, a series of reservoirs have been constructed to store the excess water available in the winter time and release it back into the River Dee during the drier months. This is the principle of
low-flow regulation. This was used by
Thomas Telford at the beginning of the nineteenth century in order to guarantee a supply of water to the
Ellesmere Canal. Telford constructed
sluices at the outlet of
Llyn Tegid (Bala Lake) to control the flow downstream so that there was always sufficient water to supply the canal where it started at
Horseshoe Falls. The River Dee has also been used for direct drinking water supply with the
Alwen Reservoir (), built in the 1920s to supply
Birkenhead with water. In the industrial revolution many rivers in industrial areas became too polluted by effluents to be usable for water supply. The Dee however remained clean with relatively few polluting effluents in the Dee catchment upstream of Chester. Consequently, the City of
Chester has been able to directly abstract Dee water since the first
Chester Waterworks Company was formed in 1826. A project to review the pressures and opportunities for the Dee abstractions was undertaken and published in 1996. One of the outcomes of this report was the development and implementation of the River Dee Water Protection Zone. ==Flow model==