A rescue plan that's hard to stomach for customers

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A rescue plan that's hard to stomach for customers
Published: Dec, 19 2024 12:39

Southern Water may not be able to guarantee that water comes out of its customers' taps but, credit where it is due, it does know how to lay on a metaphor. On the day almost 60,000 Hampshire residents faced having to queue for fresh water until the weekend the company, already carrying £6bn of debt, was told it can increase bills by 53% in order to borrow more.

The supply interruption for households, schools and hospitals near Southampton summed up the challenge of fixing a system tested almost to destruction by Britain's 35-year privatised water experiment. On the one side are customers sick, sometimes literally, at paying higher bills for what looks like failing services and rising tides of sewage. On the other, investors and creditors without whom the financial model collapses, demanding a greater return to pour good money after bad.

Money blog: Interest rate held at 4.75% after inflation rise. In the middle is Ofwat, a regulator many blame for creating the current mess through laissez-faire oversight, whose five-yearly "price review" process concluded this week is, by common consent, the most consequential since publicly owned regional water companies were sold off in 1989.

What's been announced today?. Thames Water fined £18m by Ofwat for shareholder payments. Water bills to rise: Full list of what they cost now and how much they're going up by across England and Wales. Water bills to rise by average of 36% over next five years, says water regulator Ofwat.

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