How much will water bills rise across the country?

The water industry has been engaged in long-running discussions with regulators over investment plans that will result in price rises for households over the next five years.

“The public should not put another penny of their money anywhere near these water companies. 

“Water regulator Ofwat has already written to them. The water companies confirm it. For 33 years, we have paid them all of the funding and all of the money they’ve needed to fix this kind of plant.

“It should have been fixed decades ago. They didn’t fix it. The question we should be asking is where has our money gone? What happened to it? When do we get a refund? And how dare they have the audacity to now demand that bill payers pay them a second time for a service we didn’t even get the first time round.”

“Customers cannot be penalised for sins of the past”. Feargal Sharkey (April 13)

Helen Cahill www.thetimes.co.uk

The utility operators published their proposals in October to outline how they would reduce leakage, pollution and sewage spills across their networks between 2025 and 2030 and how the investments would affect people’s bills.

Ofwat has told companies to bill customers only for new investments, rather than putting right “past failings”. The watchdog has been reviewing the individual business plans and will report its decision on the proposals from each company in June.

Severn Trent

Severn Trent is seeking to raise £1 billion to help to fund expenditure of £12.9 billion over the five-year period, with customers’ bills to increase from an annual average of £379 to £518. The London-listed company, which has about 4.2 million customers in the Midlands, has pledged to reduce leakage by 16 per cent, with spillage from storm overflows to be reduced by 30 per cent. The operator is also planning to bring down pollution levels by 30 per cent.

United Utilities

United Utilities has set out proposals to spend £13.7 billion to increase the value of its regulatory capital by 8.7 per cent per year across its operations in Cheshire, Cumbria, Lancashire, Merseyside and Greater Manchester.

The FTSE 100 company is targeting leakage reduction of 25 per cent by 2030 and has committed to reducing floods in homes and businesses by 30 per cent.The number of pollution incidents from its network are set to fall by 25 per cent by 2030, with spillages from its wastewater systems forecast to drop by 27 per cent.

United Utilities is poised to increase average yearly bills for its customers by 14 per cent from about £455 to £518.

Pennon Group

Pennon has earmarked an additional £2.8 billion of capital investment in its water and wastewater networks, which it says represents a doubling of its investment from 2020 to 2025.

The FTSE 250 group owns South West Water, Bournemouth Water and Bristol Water and its total expenditure is set to reach £4.5 billion by the end of the decade.Pennon aims to reduce leakage by 19 per cent and to “eradicate pollutants” by the end of the decade.

The average household bill for customers of South West Water would rise by 23 per cent from £504 a year to £620 for both water and wastewater services.

Pennon increased its dividend by 8.3 per cent from 12.96p a share to 14.04p, despite a slide in profit in the half-year to the end of September. Ofwat levied a £2.15 million fine on the company for dumping sewage into rivers and the sea off Devon and Cornwall.

‘Dirty secret’: insiders say UK water firms knowingly break sewage laws

Just when you thought we had plumed the depths…..Owl

Whistleblowers say UK water companies are knowingly failing to treat legally required amounts of sewage, and that some treatment works are manipulating wastewater systems to divert raw sewage away from the works and into rivers and seas.

Rachel Salvidge www.theguardian.com 

It is well known that water companies are dumping large volumes of raw sewage into rivers and seas from storm overflows but an investigation by the Guardian and Watershed Investigations reveals that the industry’s “dirty secret” is bigger, broader and deeply systemic.

By law, every wastewater treatment works must treat a minimum amount of sewage as stipulated in their environmental permits. Four whistleblowers have told Watershed that a large proportion regularly fail to do so and are not reporting it to the environmental regulator.

The insiders say the amount of sewage reaching a works is being “manipulated at the front end” by “flow trimming”, which can be done a number of ways including by “manually setting penstocks to limit the flow”, by “dropping weir levels” and by “tuning down pumps at pumping stations”. The diverted raw sewage makes its way into ditches, rivers and seas.

One industry insider says they “have personally surveyed works and found valves operated and diversion pipes installed so that part of the flow arriving is deliberately diverted to an environmentally sensitive stream, rather than into the works, so that the works passes compliance of sanitary parameters.

“I have spoken to staff who have carried out surveys to inform investment plans, who have found that the controls of terminal pumping stations have been deliberately altered so that they pump only a reduced proportion of the flow figure they were designed to pump, in the knowledge that this was a breach of flow compliance. This continues.”

The insider adds: “I have spoken to [people at] other water companies who confessed that flow compliance is a dirty secret of the UK water industry, which environmental regulators know about (although perhaps not the scale) and have turned a blind eye due to resourcing constraints.”

The raw sewage that is diverted away from the works either flows directly into ditches, rivers, lakes and seas, or backs up in the sewer network and finds its way out into the environment via storm overflows. Flow trimming, along with ingress from groundwater and an underlying fundamental lack of capacity at many sewage works, which have not been updated to meet population growth or changing weather patterns, are responsible for the widespread sewage pollution seen around the UK.

“It is an enormous scandal that many who work in the industry know about, but nobody wants to talk about,” said the whistleblower. “Water companies report their overall compliance with wastewater rules as good, but dig a little deeper and you’ll see that lots of treatment works are failing to deal with the amount of sewage they are legally meant to treat.”

The insider says non-compliance is widespread across the UK, and that they are aware of works where as much as 30% of the sewage they are expected to handle goes straight into the environment without treatment.

“Some operators, with or without the support of their chain of command, are deliberately reducing the flow of sewage into the treatment works by either dropping the levels of weirs so that sewage flows out into the environment, or by cutting back the flows at pumping stations. This way they can say they are treating a greater proportion of the sewage they receive because they are now receiving less into the works,” says the whistleblower.

“Sadly there are many incentives for water companies, rogue teams or staff to do this, including reduced cost of pumping and treatment, and treatment works that were struggling to comply appearing to be passing, with the resulting regulatory performance rewards leading to staff bonuses and increased dividends to shareholders – with very little risk that the manipulation will be found or anyone prosecuted.”

A second insider says it is “almost standard practice to control penstocks by hand to set it at a limit to reduce the flow”, adding that the problem “stems from sweating the assets … There are a lot of undersized, overcapacity sewage treatment works out there … and I’ve rarely seen a works where all the assets are working, there’s usually something out of service.

“Spilling to the river saves millions of pounds that they should be spending on assets. Lots of storm tanks are sized to meet 30-year-old permits, and there are sites with no storm capacity at all.”

A third insider says they have seen evidence of flow trimming at works owned by two different water companies.

“Operational teams on site look for a workaround, often in the full knowledge of what they are doing, and in full knowledge of all the stakeholders, from the project manager all the way up to the person holding the purse strings. Other times it’s done without knowing the implications … no one knows the true scale of what’s happening across the country.”

According to a fourth whistleblower, it is possible to identify instances of flow trimming in a company’s figures “but no one truly looks into the data, they won’t look at the detail”.

England’s water companies declined to comment, but the industry body Water UK says: “We recognise the current level of spills is unacceptable and we have a plan to sort it out. Between 2025 and 2030 water companies in England and Wales want to invest £96bn to ensure the security of our water supply in the future and significantly reduce the amount of sewage entering rivers and seas. We now need the regulator Ofwat to give us the green light so we can get on with it.”

Ofwat says water and wastewater companies’ environmental performance is “simply not good enough” and that the industry regulator is “acutely aware of the damage this does to our natural resources and to public trust.

“However, where companies fall short, Ofwat acts – over recent years, we have imposed penalties and payments of over £300m and in November 2021 we announced our biggest ever investigation into all water and wastewater companies in England and Wales, with live enforcement investigations into six companies.

“This is specifically investigating whether companies are treating as much sewage at their wastewater treatment works as they should be, and how this could be resulting in sewage discharges into the environment at times when this should not be happening.”

The Environment Agency is also investigating. A spokesperson says: “We will always pursue and prosecute companies that are deliberately obstructive or misleading, including on issues around flow compliance. We are conducting our largest-ever criminal investigation into potential widespread non-compliance at thousands of sewage treatment works.”

Geraint Weber of the regulator Natural Resources Wales says: “We expect water and sewerage companies to comply with the conditions of their environmental permits. Where non-compliance is identified we won’t hesitate to take action using the full range of enforcement powers available to us.”

Nathan Critchlow-Watton of the Scottish Environment Protection Agency says: “Sepa assess Scottish Water’s compliance with authorisation conditions at wastewater treatment works through site inspections, investigating events and incidents, sampling discharges, assessment of operator data and Sepa’s programme of environmental monitoring. We are not aware of any evidence of deliberate misreporting of overflow data by Scottish Water or other operators.”

A Scottish Water spokesperson says: “We are not routinely required by licence to assess and report whether we are passing the appropriate pass forward flow at our pumping stations and overflows and at wastewater treatment works. We set out to be compliant across all aspects of our licences and are not aware of any instances where we deliberately manage flows to spill early.”

Northern Ireland Water and Welsh Water declined to comment.

Jupp’s dodgy website has serious consequences 

We now know that in January Oliver Kerr, Jupp’s campaign manager, bought at least one of the following web addresses richardfoord.uk, richardfoord.co.uk and richardfoord.comt. In fact all three web addresses were purchased on the same day. Until 8 April, all linked directly to Mr Jupp’s website.

The purchase of these sites and subsequent automatic linking to Simon Jupp MP’s website has serious consequences for people trying to contact Richard Foord MP.

As is detailed below, Richard Foord, in only two years as an MP, has built up an enormous case load of work helping constituents. Deliberately impeding access to your MP seems to Owl to be pretty serious stuff.  It cannot be waved away as a bit of over exuberant electioneering – we are months away from that.

Oliver Kerr may have thought it a “bit of a prank”. But deliberate deceits of this kind lie at one end of a spectrum the other end of which is inhabited by scammers, phishers  and fraudsters. The people who try to divert you into divulging your personal details into bogus accounts, fraudulent services, websites etc.

This is why this particular deceit must be roundly condemned. 

Richard Foord’s casework passes 10,000

Richard Foord MP on “X

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Apr 13

Last week, my team and I finished our 10,000th piece of casework on behalf of local residents. As an MP, working on big issues like health and sewage might make newspaper headlines – but most of what I do is helping individual constituents with challenges they’re facing.

That can be anything from reporting issues with social housing, helping with delays to pension and benefit payments, or raising potholes with the County Council.

My team and I are here to help with any problems you may be having, whether they be big or small.