- Water companies urged to do more to protect the environment
and reduce storm overflows
- Protecting water environment at the heart of Ofwat’s
strategic priorities
- Environment Minister says water sector must be greener and
more resilient
Ofwat must ensure that
England’s water industry is doing more to protect the
environment, the Government has announced today (2 February) as
it set out its priorities for the regulator over the next five
years.
The new Strategic Policy
Statement (SPS), which will be set by the Government and formally
laid in Parliament later today, will stress the importance of
protecting the environment for the water sector’s economic
regulator.
It will set out the
Government’s expectation that Ofwat and water companies will
prioritise action to protect and enhance the environment, and
deliver a resilient and sustainable water
supply.
In particular, it confirms
government expectations of water companies to significantly
reduce the frequency and volume of sewage discharges from storm
overflows. It also urges Ofwat to challenge them to show how they
will be more ambitious in protecting the environment, whilst also
getting the basics right.
These priorities build on the
clear direction the Government has already set through direct
action in this area, including:
- additional duties on government and water companies in the
Environment Act, including a requirement to publish near
real time information on the operation of storm overflows and for
government to produce a statutory plan by September 2022 on
tackling the issue.
- driving increased monitoring and transparency through the
Storm Overflows Taskforce. Monitoring of the network has
increased 14-fold in the last five years and the Environment
Agency is now monitoring 80% of storm overflows – that will
increase to 100% by 2023.
- delivering practical solutions for farmers to reduce
pollution from agriculture by doubling the budget for Catchment
Sensitive Farming. This is a partnership between Defra, Natural
England and the Environment Agency providing free 1-2-1 advice to
farmers on reducing pollution through management of farmyard
manure and soils, among other things.
- tough enforcement action against water companies. Last year
the Environment Agency concluded seven prosecutions against
companies with fines of more than £100 million. The Agency has
also launched a major investigation into possible
unauthorised spills at sewage treatment works.
The SPS also gives greater
priority to addressing unsustainable abstraction, protecting
priority sites such as chalk streams, and ensuring better flood
resilience.
Environment Minister
said:
“Water quality is an
absolute priority. We are the first Government to set a clear
expectation that Ofwat should prioritise action by water
companies to protect the environment and deliver the improvements
that we all want to see. I have been very clear of my
expectations of water companies and where they do not step up we
will take robust action.
“The priorities that we are
setting out today build on the work that we have already
undertaken to reduce harm from storm overflows, improve
monitoring and reporting of pollution incidents making this more
transparent, to tackle run-off from agriculture, and protect
the health of our rivers and seas.”
As the economic regulator,
Ofwat is responsible for setting out what water companies should
focus their investment on during each five-year spending cycle.
It is the Government’s responsibility to set the strategic
direction and policy priorities as part of that process.
The ambitious agenda set out in
the new SPS follows a consultation on the
Government’s draft proposals in July 2021. It is set to influence
the next five-year spending cycle, which will run from 2025 –
2030. In the current spending cycle (2020 – 2025), £7.1 billion
is already being invested in the environment, including £3.1
billion specifically on storm overflows.
The SPS will come into effect
after it has laid in Parliament for 40 days without objection.
Ofwat must then act in accordance with this statement, explaining
clearly how major decisions support the delivery of the
government’s strategic priorities, such as its methodology for
the upcoming price review.
ENDS
Notes to
editors:
- The Government will publish a summary of responses
tomorrow (2 Feb) to the consultation on the draft Strategic
Policy Statement. The SPS will also be published on gov.uk once it
has been formally laid in Parliament.
- The Government has taken powers in the Environment Act to
create new, legally-binding targets in four priority areas
including water, and will shortly be publishing a public
consultation on the proposed targets. These will be an important
mechanism to drive environmental improvement and meet our
ambitious objectives for the water environment in the 25 Year
Environment Plan.