Water firms are ordered to pay back £114million to customers after failing to meet key targets on reducing pollution, leakage and supply interruptions
Water companies have been ordered to pay back £114million to customers after failing to meet key targets.
All but five of the 17 water and wastewater companies will be forced to give money back to bill-payers after underperforming on reducing pollution, leakage and supply interruptions, the regulator Ofwat said.
The repayments will be made through reduced bills rather than customers receiving a lump sum refund.
Not one company achieved the regulator’s top category of ‘leading’. Dwr Cymru, Southern, Thames, Anglian, Bristol, South East and Yorkshire Water fell into the lowest category of ‘lagging’ and the remaining 10 were rated ‘average’.
Ofwat judges the performance of water companies in England and Wales each year against the ‘stretching’ targets they set in 2019 for a five-year period until 2025.
Not one company achieved the regulator’s top category of ‘leading’. Dwr Cymru, Southern, Thames, Anglian, Bristol, South East and Yorkshire Water fell into the lowest category of ‘lagging’ and the remaining 10 were rated ‘average’
If they fail to meet these, Ofwat restricts the amount of money they can take from customers.
Thames Water is the company which must return the most – more than £101 million – through lower bills, followed by Southern Water which must pay out £43million.
Thames Water serves 15 million people with water and wastewater while Southern Water serves around 4.6 million.
The net total industry amount of £114million is offset by some companies being rewarded, such as Severn Trent Water taking £88million and United Utilities taking £25million.
Ofwat said these figures are provisional until it completes the review process.
Since 2020, companies have shown improvements in reducing leakage and internal sewage, with all but one company achieving the target for unplanned outages, though progress has been too slow across the board, Ofwat said.
Over the last year, fewer than half of water companies reached their target on reducing pollution or met their commitment on leakage, with an overall decline in customer satisfaction.
Companies have also not fully invested their allowance for 2020-2023 for improving services.
David Black, Ofwat’s chief executive, said: ‘The targets we set for companies were designed to be stretching – to drive improvements for customers and the environment.
‘However, our latest report shows they are falling short, leading to £114 million being returned to customers through bill reductions.
‘While that may be welcome to bill payers, it is very disappointing news for all who want to see the sector do better.
‘It is not going to be easy for companies to regain public trust, but they have to start with better service for customers and the environment.
‘We will continue to use all our powers to ensure the sector delivers better value.’
Ofwat said it is investigating all 11 water and wastewater companies with live enforcement cases for six companies for potential failures on sewage discharges into the environment.
They are also investigating Dwr Cymru and South West Water in relation to the accuracy of leakage reporting and per capita consumption.
Mike Keil, senior director at the Consumer Council for Water, said: ‘Customers are tired of not getting the service they deserve for the things they care about.
‘It’s right and fair that people get their money back when they don’t receive the services they were promised by some water companies. People want assurance that their water bill is good value for money.’
The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) said yesterday that it is providing more funding to reduce the amount of times sewage is pumped out of storm overflows, adding another £4billion on to the £56billion it announced last year.
It has updated its Storm Overflow Discharge Reduction Plan to include as ‘high priority sites’ those storm overflows that eject sewage into Marine Protected Areas, shellfish waters, Sites of Special Scientific Interest and bathing waters.
Defra said this will not result in any bill rises for customers until 2025 and that stopping all pollution would cost between £120 billion and £600 billion, which would increase annual water bills by between £271 and £817 by 2049.
Labour shadow environment secretary Steve Reed said: ‘This devastating report demonstrates the complete failure of water companies to act on the sewage scandal.
‘There can be no more damning metaphor for 13 years of Conservative failure than stinking, toxic sewage lapping up on our rivers, lakes, and seas.’
A Water UK spokesman said: ‘Today’s figures show that, in many areas, there have been significant improvements since the start of the decade.
‘There were fewer incidents of serious pollution and less leakage from our ageing water infrastructure. However, companies recognise there is still much more to do to meet the regulator’s ever-tightening targets.
‘Ensuring the security of our water supply in the future while protecting the environment will take significant investment.
‘That’s why water companies in England and Wales are proposing record levels of investment over the rest of this decade, with detailed plans set to be published next week.’
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