Published by: Ofwat
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Key Take Aways
- The 2024-25 water performance report marks the culmination of the 2020-25 investment period, highlighting both sector-wide achievements and areas needing urgent improvement.
- Overall sector performance is mixed, with notable successes in drinking water quality, sewer flooding reduction, leakage decline, and expanding support for vulnerable customers.
- Pollution incidents remain alarmingly high, with a 27% increase over five years despite a 30% reduction commitment; only two companies reported reductions.
- Customer satisfaction has declined annually since 2020-21, now at its lowest since recording began, signalling a critical gap in service delivery.
- Water supply interruptions have improved, but some companies still experience unacceptable durations, especially for outages exceeding 12 hours.
- Asset management maturity levels are under scrutiny, with ongoing efforts to optimise investment and long-term asset resilience.
- Enforcement and redress actions have led to over £700m returned to customers in redress payments over the period, reflecting regulatory accountability.
- Investment in environment-specific schemes, including pollution management and storm overflow controls, is under strategic review with targeted future investments.
- The sector overspent expenditure allowances by 17% on base costs and 23% on wholesale water and 12% on wholesale wastewater services, driven largely by unforeseen costs.
- The £104bn investment plan for 2025-30 is a record funding allocation, demanding enhanced oversight and delivery performance.
- Sector commitments extend into operational decarbonisation, with policies aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions and meeting net-zero targets by 2050.
- Transparency initiatives, including open data publishing and improved stakeholder engagement, form a core part of sector reform and consumer trust rebuilding.
Key Statistics
- 99.97% compliance with drinking water standards, ranked among the best globally.
- Leakage reduced by 43% since privatisation; sector-wide reduction of 9% over 2020-25.
- Customer satisfaction scores declined by 9%, from a median of 82.35 to 74.74.
- Pollution incidents per 10,000 km of sewer increased by 27%, from 36.29 to 45.91.
- Over £700m in redress paid to customers for poor performance across the period.
- 15 of 17 companies met their performance commitments for water supply interruptions in 2024.
- Sector overspent on wholesale water by 23% and on wholesale wastewater by 12% cumulatively over 2020-25.
- Household arrears increased by 199,000 to over 2.85 million households, although the value of arrears decreased slightly.
- Investment in smart meters planning to install over 10 million units by 2030, with £1.7bn dedicated in the sector.
- Total sector greenhouse gas emissions remained broadly consistent with 2023-24, with a focus on operational decarbonisation.
- 71% of companies achieved ‘green’ embedded emissions reporting; 29% at ‘amber’.
- Over 50% of pollution incidents are linked to sewer blockages, with some companies reporting deterioration in performance.
Key Discussion Points
- The sector’s struggle to meet pollution reduction commitments highlights industrial and operational challenges.
- Customer experience and trust are deteriorating, with satisfaction scores at their lowest, demanding urgent service improvements.
- Although leakage has significantly declined, future reductions of 20% by 2030 require accelerated efforts and innovative detection.
- Asset health management remains a focal point, with an emphasis on proactively maintaining sewer and water network integrity.
- Enforcement measures, including financial redress and fines, have been substantial, underlining regulatory seriousness.
- Sector overspending on both capital and operational expenditure reflects unforeseen costs and inflationary pressures.
- Future investment plans of £104bn and detailed delivery monitoring indicate a shift towards outcome-based regulation.
- Decarbonisation and environmental sustainability are central, with regulatory incentives aligning sector actions with net-zero pathways.
- Transparency through open data is being reinforced, promoting innovation, greater accountability, and stakeholder engagement.
- Lessons from underperforming companies, especially in pollution and service resilience, are shaping tighter future performance commitments.
- The ongoing risk to service continuity due to extreme weather events underscores the need for resilient infrastructure.
- Cross-sector collaboration and comprehensive oversight intend to drive sector-wide operational excellence and environmental stewardship.
Document Description
This article provides a detailed review of the water sector’s performance against its 2020-25 commitments, including operational, environmental, financial, and customer service metrics. It reflects on achievements, ongoing challenges, enforcement actions, and future strategic investments, particularly the £104bn allocated for 2025-30. Emphasising transparency and accountability, the article outlines regulatory responses aimed at improving performance, resilience, and sustainability across water and wastewater companies in England and Wales. It serves as a comprehensive assessment for senior managers in financial services seeking insight into sector health, risk management, and long-term investment strategies.
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