
UK water regulation overhaul offers hope for stricken Thames Water
The privatised water industry in England and Wales has provoked public fury by releasing record levels of sewage into rivers and lakes, prompting the Labour government to promise major reforms when it was elected last year.
At the centre of a sector the government describes as "broken" is Thames Water, the country's biggest water supplier with 16 million customers, whose debt pile has left it teetering on the brink of nationalisation.
Former Bank of England Deputy Governor Jon Cunliffe, who led a review of the sector published on Monday, said the current separate financial and environmental regulation of the industry had failed, and financial regulator Ofwat should be replaced.
He also suggested that a formal turnaround regime should be established, giving struggling companies space to recover under so-called "regulatory forbearance".
Thames Water has warned that under the current regime, it is facing 1.4 billion pounds in pollution fines and penalties over the next five years, pushing it towards financial collapse.
While Cunliffe called his proposals "significant", critics said they did not go far enough. Environmental campaigners blame water companies for prioritising profits over sewage, and want more radical change such as nationalisation.
"Abolishing Ofwat and replacing it with a shinier regulator won't stop sewage dumping or profiteering if the finance and ownership structures stay the same," said Giles Bristow, the CEO of campaign group Surfers Against Sewage.
Cunliffe's remit was set by the government and did not allow him to consider nationalising the water sector, which has been privately owned by regional water companies since 1989.
Under plans already set out by Ofwat, British water companies will get more than 100 billion pounds ($134 billion) of investment in the next five years to respond to population growth and climate change, funded by an average 36% increase in customer bills.
Cunliffe told the BBC that the major leap in bills would not have been needed if the industry and regulator had steadily increased investment over the years.
Environment Minister Steve Reed, who on Sunday promised to halve sewage pollution by 2030, will respond later on Monday.
The government wants to avoid Thames Water from entering special administration, a form of temporary nationalisation, because it does not want its 17 billion pounds of debt on the national balance sheet.
In a last ditch attempt to avoid administration, a group of Thames Water senior creditors are trying to take over the company. It welcomed Cunliffe's report.
"It is in the public interest to recognise that regulatory support is needed to reset struggling companies and return them back to compliance and performance while retaining long-term investor confidence," a source close to a Thames bondholder said.
Under Cunliffe's recommendations, the government would direct the new regulator to set out returns, improving investor confidence, while also protecting consumers and the environment, and setting up regional water planning authorities.
($1 = 0.7460 pounds)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
a few seconds ago
- The Independent
Liverpool set to sign Hugo Ekitike after Alexander Isak snub
Liverpool have agreed a £69m deal with Eintracht Frankfurt to sign striker Hugo Ekitike. The transfer fee could rise to £79m with add-ons, making Ekitike Liverpool's fourth summer signing; Liverpool were briefly interested in signing Alexander Isak from Newcastle United. The French forward is set to undergo a medical and sign a six-year contract, with personal terms not expected to be an issue. Ekitike, 23, scored 22 goals last season, including 15 in the Bundesliga, and preferred Liverpool over Newcastle. This acquisition will push Liverpool's summer spending towards the £250m mark, following other significant signings.


Telegraph
2 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Treasury leaves door open to tax raid on pensioners
Labour has left the door open to a tax raid on pensioners as Rachel Reeves struggles to balance the books. Pensions minister Torsten Bell said it was important that people were not 'taxed twice' on the money they saved for retirement, but refused to rule out a broader raid. It suggests that reliefs such as the 25pc tax-free lump sum currently available to retirees could be in the firing line. The news came as the Government paved the way for the state pension age to be raised and suggested millions of workers would have to sacrifice more of their pay to prevent a looming retirement crisis. Mr Bell, who is also a Treasury minister, declined to rule out a tax raid on pensions, only pledging to ensure the tax system continues to encourage saving. He highlighted that the Treasury hands tens of billions in tax relief to savers in private pensions every year. Mr Bell said: 'We have a system of pension tax relief costing around £70bn a year that does provide strong incentives for saving. And that's a good thing. 'What does the pension tax system do? It makes it easy for people to smooth their incomes over their lifetime. We're not taxing you twice. That is an important feature of most tax systems, and it will remain an important feature.' Asked if he could rule out any future tax raid on pensions, Mr Bell said: 'I can't rule out any change on any tax.' At the moment, savers do not pay income tax on contributions to pension schemes. Instead, any tax someone would normally pay is added to the pension in the form of tax relief at a person's marginal rate. This means that basic rate payers get a relief equal to 20pc of their payments to cancel out the income tax that would otherwise be due. Higher rate payers – those earning more than £50,270 – get relief of 40pc, and most additional rate payers earning more than £125,140 get 45pc. In addition, most savers can take 25pc of their pension pot tax-free once they reach the age of 55, up to a maximum of £268,275. The Chancellor is said to be weighing up a tax raid on pensioners as she attempts to find ways to plug a black hole in her budget. The Treasury has long wanted to tax pension savings and has a detailed plan drawn up for a raid that has been presented to successive chancellors since the coalition government took power in 2010. Mandarins have previously floated proposals for a flat 30pc rate of pension tax relief – meaning that higher rate payers would pay an effective 10pc tax charge on their retirement contributions for the first time. The plan would affect up to 6m higher and additional rate taxpayers, costing the wealthiest savers around £2,600. Ms Reeves has also spoken in favour of restricting relief on pensions but has since distanced herself from the proposals, insisting she has 'no plans' to change the current regime. The Times reported the Chancellor is reluctant to publicly rule out a wealth tax as she considers an increase in capital gains tax and a raid on pensioners. Both measures could be seen as a form of wealth tax, leaving her open to criticism if she rules it out, and both measures are said to be under consideration. It comes as Ms Reeves faces pressure from Labour backbenchers to introduce a blanket wealth tax. Earlier this month Lord Kinnock said the party was 'willing to explore' the idea and suggested the Government could raise an extra £10bn a year by imposing a 2pc tax on assets worth more than £10m. Backbenchers are pressuring the Government to consider the proposal and No 10 has so far refused to rule out a wealth tax. However, there are fears that such a policy would trigger a fresh exodus of the rich and could prove self-defeating. Many wealthy residents are already moving abroad after Ms Reeves scrapped non-dom status and introduced inheritance tax on overseas trusts earlier this year. Concerns about a potential raid on pensioners came as the Government launched a pension commission on Monday and warned that almost half of working-age adults are not putting any money into a private pension.


BBC News
2 minutes ago
- BBC News
Reform UK's Nigel Farage proposes sending prisoners overseas
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage has proposed sending some prisoners overseas to serve their sentences, as part of a raft of measures he says would create around 30,000 prison places and cost £ at an event in London, he also announced plans to build five prisons, return foreign prisoners to their country of origin, and recruit 30,000 police said the UK was "facing nothing short of societal collapse" and that a Reform government would halve crime in five years. Labour said the policies were "unfunded" - while the Conservatives accused Farage of offering "tough talk without the faintest idea how to deliver it". Asked after his speech how the policies would be funded, Farage said tax rises would not be needed and that Reform was "advocating cutting huge amounts of public spending," including the HS2 rail project and net-zero said crime costed the British economy £170bn, adding: "It isn't really a question of can we afford to do this - it is really a question of can we afford not to do this?"Reform UK estimates its proposals would cost £17.4bn over five years, with an annual cost of £3.48bn. Plans to hire more police officers make up £10.5bn of the overall bill. In order to create more prison spaces, Farage said his party would use the Army to build five new low-security 'Nightingale' prisons on Ministry of Defence land, creating 12,400 spaces for "lower category offenders".The Nightingale label is a reference to the network of emergency temporary hospitals set up during the Covid said he would be willing to force Reform-run councils to accept new prisons in their area, adding that it would bring well paid jobs to local communities. Reform is also proposing to create 10,400 places by transferring foreign prisoners to their country of origin. In exchange, the UK would be prepared to accept British offenders serving sentences abroad, he said.A further 10,000 prison places could be found by sending serious offenders to serve their sentences abroad, the party said his party would consider multiple locations and pointed to Kosovo, Estonia and El Salvador as possibilities, although when pressed on the central American country's human rights record, he said it was an "extreme example". Earlier this year, the El Salvadorian President offered to take prisoners in the US - including those with American citizenship - and house them in El Salvador's mega-jail. Other countries have pursued similar arrangements - in 2021 Denmark agreed to pay Kosovo an annual fee of £12.8m for an initial five-year period to rent 300 of their prison spaces. Successive UK governments have reportedly explored the idea of sending prisoners to BBC has been told that both former Conservative ministers and current Labour ones came to the view that such a plan would be very September of last year, the government said it was "making no such plans or announcements in relation to Estonian prison places".A growing prison population, coupled with a lack of new prisons, has put pressure on the system. Last year, the Prison Governors' Association warned that prisons in England and Wales were days away from running out of space, leading to the government letting some inmates out of prison early. Responding to the speech, Labour Party chair Ellie Reeves said Reform was "more interested in headline-chasing than serious policy-making in the interests of the British people."She added that Labour was "backing up its word with action," pointing to the party's plan to hire 13,000 more police officers and community support officers by the time of the next election in 2029.A Conservative Party spokesperson said Farage was "offering tough talk without the faintest idea how to deliver it" adding that he had not explained how he would fund the additional prisons places. They said the Tories would pass a law making it easier to deport foreign criminals.