The Boat Race is a curious phenomenon. Two of the most recognisable universities in the world, bywords for a certain establishment elitism, compete in a sport that is closed off to most people.
That the BBC still talk it up and run it live says more about the straitened times the broadcaster finds itself in than the broad desire to see the blues give it some welly at Putney Bridge.
There are issues around class as the defining element of the event. But that is hardly news. What is more relevant is what happened after the Boat Race this year – or what didn’t happen.
Crews were warned not to throw each other into the Thames for a celebratory, or commiseratory, dip. This is because levels of pollution are at a staggering level. Testing showed levels of E coli almost three times the Environment Agency’s threshold for “poor” bathing waters.
Any level of E coli, given that it is a bacteria traced to sewage, is hardly welcome. It’s the second year in a row there were significant such warnings. Thames Water, not exactly a trusted paragon of quality, said £1.8 billion would be committed to improve the rivers around London.
As Big Issue reports this week, this is a small part of a national problem that has been recognised for years, but shows little movement on any clean water dial. Water companies in England reported 2,487 pollution ‘incidents’ in 2024. That is a 30% increase on the Environment Agency target to reduce sewage.