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Water Companies Face Regular MOT-Style Checks in Major Industry Shake-up

BBC
January 19, 20263 days ago
Water companies to face regular MOT-style checks in industry shake-up

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The government is overhauling the water industry with MOT-style checks and unannounced inspections for water companies. This aims to address pollution, leaks, and outages. New measures include water efficiency labels, smart meters, and a new regulator to replace Ofwat, marking the most significant reform since privatisation. These changes follow widespread public anger and a review recommending industry improvements.

Inspections without notice, regular MOT-style checks and compulsory water efficiency labels on appliances are among the key measures in the government's overhaul of the water industry. The government is describing the measures as as the biggest overhaul of the water industry in England and Wales since privatisation. Environment Secretary Emma Reynolds said there will be "nowhere to hide" for poor performing water companies. The proposed changes come after widespread public anger at increasing numbers of pollution incidents, leaks and water outages that have affected thousands of customers across England and Wales in recent years. Reynolds told the BBC: "We've had a system whereby water companies are marking their own homework." "This has been a whole system failure," she said. "A failure of regulation, a failure of regulators, of the water companies themselves." The Water white paper promises to set up company-specific teams to monitor, supervise and support individual firms and their particular issues rather than rely on a "desk based, one size fits all" approach. Smart meters and mandatory water efficiency labels on appliances including dishwashers and washing machines will also help households monitor their usage and costs, the government said. It is also creating a chief engineer role at the regulator that will be set up to replace Ofwat. Government officials have told the BBC that the establishment of a new regulator may take a year or more and water companies say it will take time for the benefits of new investments to be felt. The government's reforms come after a review by Sir John Cunliffe, who issued 88 recommendations to improve the industry. However, he was asked not to consider whether to nationalise the sector, which was privatised in the late 1980s. Campaigners said the proposed reforms did not go far enough. River Action chief executive James Wallace said the measures showed the government "recognises the scale of the freshwater emergency, but lacks the urgency and bold reform to tackle it". The new regulator must be "truly independent" and properly funded, he warned, and said major gaps remain. "None of these reforms will make a meaningful difference unless the failed privatised model is confronted head on. Pollution for profit is the root cause of this crisis," Wallace said. Surfers Against Sewage chief executive Giles Bristow said the government's proposed changes were "frankly insulting" and fall short of much needed structural reform. "The truth is glaringly obvious to everyone except this government. As long as the industry is structured to prioritise profit, the public will keep paying the price through soaring bills and polluted water," he said. Ofwat, is currently the water industry's economic regulator for both England and Wales. In October 2025 the Welsh government said that when Ofwat is abolished it plans to form its own stand-alone economic regulator to replace it. In 2025, water supply interruptions across England and Wales rose by 8% and pollution incidents by 27%, while customer satisfaction fell by 9%. Average water bills rose by 26%, or £123 a year, from last April after years of below-inflation increases that some have blamed, along with high executive pay and shareholder dividends, on under-investment in the sector. The sharp rise in bills is meant to address that under-investment by funding spending of £104 billion over the next five years - more than 40% of which is earmarked for new infrastructure.

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    Water Industry Shake-up: New MOT-Style Checks