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Thames Water collapse will hit taxpayers, MP warns Thames Water has significant issues to address, Ofwat says
(32 minutes later)
Taxpayers will be exposed to the debts and running costs of Thames Water if the government has to take it over, the Business Committee chair has said. Thames Water has "significant issues to address" and needs to improve its "financial resilience", the water regulator Ofwat has said.
The UK's largest water company, which serves a quarter of the UK population, is in talks to secure extra funding as it struggles to pay its debts.The UK's largest water company, which serves a quarter of the UK population, is in talks to secure extra funding as it struggles to pay its debts.
On Wednesday, the government said it was ready to act in a worst case scenario if the company collapsed.On Wednesday, the government said it was ready to act in a worst case scenario if the company collapsed.
Regardless of what happens, water supplies will continue as normal.Regardless of what happens, water supplies will continue as normal.
Speaking to BBC Breakfast, Labour MP Darren Jones, the chair of the Business and Trade Committee, said that if the government was forced to take over the running of Thames Water, "taxpayers will be exposed to the debt and running costs of a very large company". The government has said that "a lot of work is going on behind the scenes" with Thames Water and it had a process in place "if necessary".
He said that the problems seen at energy companies in recent years showed that: "We have to take on the cost of running these failed businesses, which is why it's so galling for taxpayers when they see that regulators and minsters have failed to spot this problem before it all blew up." Business Secretary Kemi Badenoch said on Wednesday she was "very concerned" by the situation, adding "we need to make sure Thames Water as an entity survives".
On Wednesday, the government said "a lot of work is going on behind the scenes" with Thames Water and it had a process in place "if necessary". In a statement, Ofwat said it had been clear "that Thames Water has significant issues to address - their environmental record and leakage performance, for example, are poor".
Business Secretary Kemi Badenoch said she was "very concerned" by the situation, adding "we need to make sure Thames Water as an entity survives". "Alongside the turnaround of their operational performance, they need to improve their financial resilience too."
However, Ofwat also noted that the company still has access to funds. "It recently received an additional £500m from shareholders and has £4.4bn of cash and committed funding."
It added that it would continue to keep water companies' financial resilience "under close scrutiny and work with companies to ensure they take action to ensure that they have the financial backing to deliver for customers and the environment".
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It follows a Times report which quotes a Whitehall source as saying many other water companies "are highly geared [indebted] and struggling".
A government source pointed out that Ofwat raised the issue in December in its 2021/22 Monitoring Financial Resilience report, with Thames Water, Southern, Yorkshire, SES and Portsmouth mentioned.
Thames Water has come in for strong criticism over its performance following a series of sewage discharges and leaks. The firm leaks more water than any other water company in UK, losing the equivalent of up to 250 Olympic size swimming pools every day from its pipes.Thames Water has come in for strong criticism over its performance following a series of sewage discharges and leaks. The firm leaks more water than any other water company in UK, losing the equivalent of up to 250 Olympic size swimming pools every day from its pipes.
Thames Water has said it is trying to raise the cash it needs, and is keeping water regulator Ofwat informed on progress, and that it still had "strong" cash and borrowing reserves to draw on.Thames Water has said it is trying to raise the cash it needs, and is keeping water regulator Ofwat informed on progress, and that it still had "strong" cash and borrowing reserves to draw on.
But the firm is understood to be struggling to raise the money it needs to service its substantial debt pile, which is around £14bn. Interest payments on more than half of its debt are linked to the rate of inflation, which has soared over the last year.But the firm is understood to be struggling to raise the money it needs to service its substantial debt pile, which is around £14bn. Interest payments on more than half of its debt are linked to the rate of inflation, which has soared over the last year.
If the firm cannot secure additional funding, it could be temporarily taken over by the government until a new buyer is found, in a special administration regime (SAR). This route was most recently taken with energy supplier Bulb after it ran into financial difficulties.If the firm cannot secure additional funding, it could be temporarily taken over by the government until a new buyer is found, in a special administration regime (SAR). This route was most recently taken with energy supplier Bulb after it ran into financial difficulties.
On Tuesday, Thames Water's chief executive Sarah Bentley quit the business after just two years in the job. It came weeks after she was asked to forgo her bonus over the company's handling of sewage spills.On Tuesday, Thames Water's chief executive Sarah Bentley quit the business after just two years in the job. It came weeks after she was asked to forgo her bonus over the company's handling of sewage spills.
Speaking to BBC Breakfast, Labour MP Darren Jones, the chair of the Business and Trade Committee, said that if the government was forced to take over the running of Thames Water, "taxpayers will be exposed to the debt and running costs of a very large company".
He said that the problems seen at energy companies in recent years showed that: "We have to take on the cost of running these failed businesses, which is why it's so galling for taxpayers when they see that regulators and minsters have failed to spot this problem before it all blew up."
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