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Veolia Water Central (formerly Three Valleys Water) was a privately owned company supplying water to Hertfordshire and parts of Surrey, North London and Bedfordshire, in England. It was owned by Veolia Environnement , a French company with international interests in the water, waste management, energy and transportation sectors.
Three Valleys Water plc (1994–2009) ... Affinity Water Limited is a UK supplier of drinking water to 3.8 million people in parts of London, ...
The Colne Valley Water Company was a statutory water company, formed in 1873. For a hundred years its water supply was obtained from underground sources accessed by boreholes. Pressure on these resources led to the Three Valleys Scheme and the construction of nine miles of trunk main from the River Thames was completed in 1974.
Three Valleys means refer to: Three Valleys Water, a water company in the United Kingdom; Three Valleys, a homestead in North Bungunya, Queensland; Three Valleys, a former electoral ward in Dorset; Les Trois Vallées, a ski region in Southeastern France; Tres Valles, a town and municipality in Veracruz, Mexico
At 2,300m above sea level, Val Thorens is the highest of the three main resorts of the Three Valleys. The area, which includes the resorts of Meribel and Courchevel, is home to around 160 lifts ...
Diamond Valley Lake is their third and newest reservoir, with a capacity of 810,000 acre-feet (1.00 × 10 9 m 3) of water. This capacity is over twice as large as that of Castaic Lake , the next largest reservoir in Southern California maintained by the state Department of Water Resources.
Three Valley Gap is an unincorporated community at the eastern end of Three Valley Lake in the Shuswap Country region of southeastern British Columbia. On BC Highway 1 , the locality is by road about 21 kilometres (13 mi) southwest of Revelstoke , and 51 kilometres (32 mi) northeast of Sicamous .
The topography of the three main gentle natural valley systems allowed for the creation of interconnected tanks and wetlands where water flows downstream through a series of channels or drains. These tank cascades or chains have seen accelerated change and fragmentation caused by urbanisation in the past four decades. [ 1 ]