The price of water services in the UK keep on climbing, but the services keep on getting worse, especially where sewage and river pollution are concerned.
Yet over the last decades shareholders have been well-rewarded and yet some of our water companies are facing massive debt and even bankruptcy, so why are our water systems in such a mess...?
Rising Costs, Falling Standards
Water bills are on track to jump by 67% in real terms compared to the early ‘90s. And yet, somehow, customers are getting less for their money. Whole communities have gone days without water after big outages. Leaks are everywhere—billions of litres lost daily, water vanishing through old pipes.
But the issue that really gets people is the sewage. Overflow systems now dump waste into rivers and the sea hundreds of thousands of times a year. These systems were never built for constant overflows, but here we are. Now, only a tiny proportion of England’s rivers are still considered healthy.
Privatisation the Problem...?
UK eater got privatised in the 1980s.... the pitch was the usual BS that private companies would invest more and run things better. For a while, it looked like it was working. Pipes were upgraded, water got cleaner.
But cracks started to show. Many water companies piled on debt, even while they kept paying out big dividends. Instead of reinvesting in the system, profits just left.
Regulation: Where Did It Go Wrong?
Regulators were supposed to stop things from going off the rails. But this may have been a situation, ironically, of toon much regulation with not enough clarity: too many agencies, not enough clear responsibility.
Ofwat often kept its focus on low bills, and in doing so, long-term investment fell by the wayside. At the same time, environmental enforcement got weaker—some of that comes down to budget cuts.
People talk about “regulatory capture”—basically, regulators getting too cozy with the very companies they’re supposed to keep in line, and for too many years bad performance often just got a slap on the wrists.
Final Thoughts
Fixing this mess won’t be easy.
The government says tougher rules, more investment, and stricter pollution targets are on the way. But someone’s got to pay for all of this and, as usual, it’s probably going to be the public.
The bigger question is whether the whole system can ever actually deliver what people expect: water that’s reliable, affordable, and environmentally sound.
Right now, it’s not doing any of those things.