Ofwat confirms £86m enforcement packages for Anglian Water and South West Water
£62.8m to be paid by Anglian Water and its shareholders, for the
benefit of the environment and their customers. £24m enforcement
package to be paid by South West Water and its shareholders, for
the benefit of the environment and their customers. More than £240m
in wastewater enforcement fines and redress confirmed by Ofwat in
2025. Ofwat has today, 9 September, confirmed its final decisions
in its wastewater investigations against Anglian Water and South
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Ofwat has today, 9 September, confirmed its final decisions in its wastewater investigations against Anglian Water and South West Water. A total of £86.8m will be paid by the companies as enforcement packages following findings that both companies breached their legal obligations in operating their wastewater treatment works and networks. In stepping up to acknowledge what has gone wrong and how they will put things right, Anglian Water and its shareholders will fund a total enforcement package of £62.8m, and South West Water will fund an enforcement package of £24m. These outcomes follow two separate public consultations on the draft decisions, published on 29 July and 10 July respectively. These packages are in addition to the investment that the companies will need to make to remedy breaches Ofwat's investigations found in order to ensure their future compliance. The investigations found that both companies failed to operate, maintain and upgrade their wastewater assets adequately to ensure they could cope with the flows of sewage and wastewater coming to them. The companies failed to have in place adequate processes and oversight by their senior management and Board to ensure assets were performing adequately and that they were meeting the legal requirements expected of them. With the conclusion of these cases, Ofwat has now closed five wastewater investigations in 2025 which has resulted in enforcement action worth more than £240m. Lynn Parker, Senior Director for Enforcement at Ofwat, said: “Our investigations found failures in how Anglian Water and South West Water have operated and maintained their sewage works and networks, which has resulted in excessive spills from storm overflows. These are serious breaches and are unacceptable. “We understand that the public wants to see transformative change. That is why we are prioritising this sector-wide investigation which is holding wastewater companies to account for identified failures. We are pleased both companies have accepted that they got things wrong and are now focusing on putting that right and taking action to come back into compliance. We expect all companies to do the same so that customers can regain confidence in their water company and the critical service they provide.” Following the publication of the Independent Water Commission final report, the UK government has set out a new direction for the water sector with the formation of a new regulator in England. This marks an opportunity to reset the sector, so it delivers better outcomes for customers and the environment. Ofwat will now work with the government and other regulators to form this new body in England, combining Ofwat with the Drinking Water Inspectorate and including elements of the Environment Agency and Natural England. We will also continue to engage with the Welsh Government and contribute to discussions on the options for Wales. Until these new arrangements are in place, we will keep working hard to drive water companies to improve performance and deliver maximum value for customers, communities, and the environment. ENDS Notes for editors:
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