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BBC News, Sydney
A “large” sewerage block caused by “fat, fat and rags” has forced the cancellation of a Bryan Adams concert in Australia by public health land.
The Grammy winning artist had to act in the Arena Rac in Perth on Sunday, but the city’s water corporation said that a main blocked risked the toilets of the place.
Adams apologized to fans on social networks, many of whom had aligned for hours just to be rejected, and thanked them for their “patience and support” before promising trying to reprogram the program.
But the promoter of the concert said that, although the cancellation was “bitterly disappointing”, he could only provide holders for holders a complete refund.
“While they did everything possible to continue the show, this matter was out of Bryan Adams, Frontier Touring and Rac Arena,” he wrote in a statement.
Perth’s Water Corporation said the fatberg responsible for the interruption had already “caused several wastewater overflows” on the main road near the place and urged the public to avoid direct contact with “grouped water” in the area.
“We apologize for the inconvenience that this has caused and we will provide more updates as necessary,” he said in a Facebook post, advising cancellation.
Adams, known for his iconic successes as Summer of ’69 and Please Forgive Me, made his Australian debut in 1984 and has remained a loved artist throughout the country since then.
“I’m very sorry that we couldn’t happen tonight, I really wanted to see them all,” he published on social networks on Sunday.
The Canadian rock star will still reproduce in Sydney, Brisbane and Melbourne at the end of this week.
Found on sewers around the world, fatbergs are formed when fat, oil and fat solidify and bind with items such as wet rags or wipes.
It is known that they cause serious blockages and environmental risks. Last year, a Fatberg weighs approximately three two -story buses He was clear from a sewer in East London. And New York, Denver, Melbourne and Valencia have found that Giant Fatbergs blocks their river paths in recent years.