A majority of Thames Water customers want the water regulator Ofwat to reject a controversial deal to write down the company’s debts which would allow it to keep polluting rivers until 2040. At the same time, more than two thirds of customers want the company to be nationalised, new polling has found.
Thames Water is currently negotiating over the deal, under which there would be no “full return to legal, regulatory and environmental compliance” until 2035-40, in a bid to save the company. Amid this, customers’ water bills have increased by a third and the company’s debt has grown to nearly £20 billion.
It’s the latest twist in a saga which has seen court battles over the potential nationalisation of the embattled utility company.
Sophie Conquest, lead campaigner at We Own It, which carried out the polling of 1,000 Thames water customers and has also been challenging the bailout deal, said the research gave proof that customers wanted Thames Water run in the public sector.
“People are absolutely sick of paying more and more for a broken water system, all while watching as shareholders continue to extract eyewatering profits,” said Conquest.
“If this government is serious about tackling the cost of living crisis, they must cut water bills. Public ownership would stop huge sums of money from leaking out of our water system in the form of shareholder payouts, meaning reduce costs for bill-payers.”









