The government has today (20
March) backed new plans for the water regulator
Ofwat to take action against water companies that
pay out dividends to their shareholders despite failing to meet
the required performance standards.
The changes have been made
possible by the government’s Environment Act 2021 which gave
Ofwat new powers to change water company licences without consent
from water companies.
As such, Ofwat is now modifying
licences to require companies to:
- Take account of environmental performance and customer
delivery when deciding whether to pay dividends.
- Hold a strong credit rating and stop them paying dividends if
their financial health is at risk.
If a company falls short, Ofwat
will be able to take enforcement action.
These changes will improve the
environmental performance and financial health of water
companies, as well as providing greater transparency with
customers and stakeholders.
Water Minister said:
“It is wrong for water
companies to be responsible for environmental damage and poor
performance but not face the penalties. It has been happening too
often and it needs to stop.
“These new powers, made
possible through our Environment Act, will enable Ofwat to clamp
down on excessive cash pay-outs and make sure companies put
customers first. This will apply when a company is not meeting
expectations on performance or is facing questions over its
financial resilience – and ultimately means we go further in
holding water companies to account.”
The government has taken
further action in recent years to hold water companies to account
for pollution, including:
- Hugely increasing monitoring of discharges, from
approximately 10% of storm overflows monitored in 2015 to 100% by
the end of this year. While storm overflows have existed for over
a century, the government was the first to require water
companies to comprehensively monitor so that the issue can be
tackled.
-
Making it easier and quicker for
regulators to enforce civil penalties for companies that
breachtheir licence
conditions, with a consultation set to launch in the spring.
Funding from all penalties and fines will also now
be invested in schemes that benefit our
natural environment.
- Securing record fines for water companies that break the law.
Since 2015, the Environment Agency has secured fines of over
£142m through criminal proceedings.
- Publishing the Storm Overflows Discharge Reduction
Plan, which will require water companies to
deliver the largest infrastructure programme in water company
history - £56 billion capital investment over 25 years. Water
companies are already investing £3.1 billion in storm overflow
improvements between 2020 and 2025. This includes £1.9
billion investment into the
Thames Tideway Tunnel super sewer, with the rest used to
undertake over 800 investigations and over 800 improvement
schemes to storm overflows.
-
Demanding a clear assessment and action
plan on every storm overflow from every
water and sewerage company in England, prioritising those that
are spilling more than a certain number of times a year, and
those spilling into bathing waters and high priority nature
sites.
The majority of licence changes
will be implemented eight weeks
after publication – by 17 May 2023.
ENDS
Notes for
Editors:
- This decision document sets out
the reasons for Ofwat’s decision to make these changes to water
company licences.