Business News

Thames Water commits an additional £700 million to improve water supplies

Published by
Peter Davison

Utilities firm Thames Water has confirmed an investment of £700 million to upgrade its Victorian infrastructure in London, the Thames Valley, and the Home Counties.

The Reading-headquartered company says the investment will reduce leaks across London and once upgrades are complete will save around 11 Olympic swimming pools worth of water every day.

Thames Water has been given the go ahead for its ambitious plans to transform London’s network of Victorian water pipes, having met additional requirements set out by industry regulator Ofwat.

The regulator conditionally granted the company £300 million to enhance the performance of its London water network.

Thames Water has since met the agreed requirements and committed a significant shareholder investment of £400 million that will benefit customers across the region through investment in water supply.

In line with Ofwat’s approval, Thames Water has agreed to three new performance commitments for the 2020-2025 price control period, supporting efficient and timely delivery of the schemes associated with this allowance. These include:

Reducing the number of leaks across London by 2030 – saving 27.8 megalitres per day and reducing the number of mains repairs by 208 times per year
Delivering its Future London Strategy – including ambitious plans to reduce leakage by 50 per cent
Assessing pipework across the city to see if it is fit for the future

Nevil Muncaster, London operations director at Thames Water, said: “Fixing the basics is a key part of our ambitious turnaround plan.

"We’ve faced one of our most challenging years to date with the drought and extremely hot weather placing immense pressure on water pipes across our region, ultimately leading to an increase in leaks.

“The impact of climate change and increasing population size is evident, which is why we’re committed to upgrading London’s Victorian pipes, investing millions to ensure our infrastructure is fit for the 21st Century.

“We are always closely assessing our infrastructure and are pleased that Ofwat backed our business case to replace 112km of our leakiest water mains pipes across London. We believe in making every drop count and once complete this ambitious project with help us to save 27.8 megalitres of water every single day- that's equivalent to 11 Olympic sized swimming pools.”

“Our shareholders have also provided a substantial £400 million investment to ensure we can improve our operations and outcomes for customers, whilst increasing our resilience.”

Peter Davison

Peter Davison is deputy editor of The Business Magazine. He has spent his life in journalism – doing work experience in newsrooms in and around Bristol while still at school, and landing his first job on a local newspaper aged 19. By 28 he was the youngest newspaper editor in the country. An early advocate of online news, he spent the first years of the 2000s telling his bosses that the internet posed both the biggest opportunity and greatest threat to the newspaper industry and the art of journalism. He was right on both counts. Since 2006 he has enjoyed a career as a freelance journalist. He lives in rural Wiltshire with one wife, two children, and three cats.

Recent Posts

Publisher Future plc sees in-line trading in first-half

Bath-based Future plc, the publisher of specialist online and print magazines, said trading in its…

23 hours ago

IS-Instruments Ltd and Bristol university among six UKAEA contract winners

The university of Bristol was one of six organisations to receive a contract from the…

23 hours ago

Oxford BioDynamics teams up with King's College in bid to boost rheumatoid arthritis prevention

Oxford BioDynamics Plc is teaming up with researchers at King's College London in a bid…

24 hours ago

UK needs quarter of a million extra construction workers by 2028

More than a quarter of a million extra construction workers are needed in the UK…

24 hours ago

Vistry makes good start to year, bolstered by partnership model

Kent-based housebuilder Vistry revealed it was on track to deliver more than 10% growth in…

24 hours ago

Dorset start-up with green ambitions boosted by SWIG Finance loan

A Dorset-based company, which has developed ground-breaking technology to recycle plastic waste and turn it…

24 hours ago