Liverpool Water Witch - world leaders in marine pollution control
Liverpool Water Witch is a family-run business established in 1966, building innovative multi-purpose environmental vessels for debris removal and waterway maintenance.
We offer a wide range of versatile vessels in steel and aluminium for sale or hire, designed using advanced CAD techniques based on tried & time-tested designs to your exact specifications and requirements.
Our products are currently in service world-wide, operating in numerous countries including: Singapore, Hong Kong, Kuwait, Malaysia, USA, South Africa, Western Australia and throughout Europe.
Contact us - we can help solve your waterway maintenance problems today!
Latest News
"Swallows rubbish, dead rats and seagulls"
Read what one of our latest Buddies has been up to in the Norwegian town of Sandefjord, as reported by Sandefjords Blad - including video!
Read the Google-translated article (Or the original Norwegian here)
How we killed paradise with plastic: Grotesque consequences of our casual throwaway culture
The sea surrounding the remote Pacific atoll of Midway is vivid turquoise, the sky a deep blue. At first sight it is a paradise, a nature reserve for two million laysan albatrosses. But then you look again. Where there ought to be pristine beach, there is rubbish. Tons of it. Rope, shampoo bottles, computer casings, plastic sheeting, fragments of artificial white and blue.
Read more...
World marine debris totals 10 million pieces in 1-day cleanup
WASHINGTON, April 13 (Reuters) - More than 10 million pieces of trash were plucked from the world's waterways in a single day last year. But for Philippe Cousteau, the beach sandals that washed up in the Norwegian arctic symbolized the global nature of the problem of marine debris.
Pre-Christmas cleanup
As part of its bid to make its neighbourhoods cleaner, greener and safer, social landlord Riverside took part in a canal cleanup and towpath tidy in Litherland.
...Read more at 24dash.com
Tidal Wave of Trash Threatens Our Oceans
April 2009 is the launch date for an extraordinary project: A Convenient Truth, or ACT. Young Dutch academics create an international network to look for solutions to important global problems, and will put their solutions into practice. The first subject they will tackle is the plastic waste in the oceans.



