Water companies in England and Wales have been told they will not be allowed to impose the hikes to bills they have demanded, the industry regulator has said in an interim verdict on their business plans for the next five years.
Ofwat declared that it was minded to slash, by a third, the combined increases that the 16 companies had submitted.
It left the average bill, the watchdog said, set to rise by £19 a year or 21% over the period.
A final ruling will be made in December.
All firms sought hefty increases to bills between 2025-30, with Southern Water leading the way with a proposed rise of almost 73%.
As Ofwat’s report suggests, their wishes – including the 42% hike demanded by crisis-hit Thames Water – are unlikely to be fully met following final consultations on the plans at a time when the industry is under such heavy fire from many sides.
It has long been accused of prioritising bonuses and shareholder dividends over investment in key infrastructure, systems that widely date back to the Victorian era.
Sky News revealed on Wednesday that the new environment secretary Steve Reed had summoned bosses for an urgent meeting, when his plans for tougher regulation will be spelled out later on Thursday.
These “initial steps” include customer panels to hold company boards to account and significantly higher financial penalties for failures.
Read more:
Thames Water pins survival hopes on Ofwat’s shoulders
Why water firms argue that higher bills are essential
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