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Politics

Thames Water secures £3bn emergency bailout – here's what it means for your bills and your wallet

Thames Water has secured a government bailout to deal with its extensive debts. Here's what it means for water bills

We Own It campaigners protesting against the £3 billion Thames Water bailout.

Thames Water has won court approval to secure a £3bn bailout from its biggest creditors – a decision campaigners warn will lead to massive bill hikes.

The cash lifeline – approved in the Royal Courts of Justice on Tuesday (17 December) – means the debt-ridden water giant can avoid temporary nationalisation.

Without it, the company would have run out of money by 24 March 2025; It now has sufficient funds to operate up to October. But the court’s decision could have significant implications for the company’s 16 million customers.

The interest rate for the loan is nearly 10%; Campaign group We Own It claims that it will accrue £300m in interest a year over two and a half years, adding an extra £250 a year to the average bill.

“It is obvious that the consumer as the sole source of revenue will indirectly fund this amount [of interest] by way of increases in their water bills,” an open letter from director Cat Hobbs reads.

Water bills already exceed £470 per year – and Thames Water has requested regulator permission to increase them by 53%, increasing household expenditure to an average of £667 a year by 2030.

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Industry watchdog Ofwat is likely to reject the request: it is reportedly considering increases of 21% (£19 a year). A decision is due on Thursday (19 December).

Ofwat recently blocked Thames Water from using customer money to pay executive bonuses. The company gave executive bosses £770,000 in bonuses in 2023-24 – a decision defended by top executive Chris Weston.

“I completely understand that there are customers out there who struggle with their bills,” he said – but added that the firm needed to offer “competitive” salaries to attract talent. Weston himself was awarded a bonus of £195,000 for his first three months at the company.

Together with Windrush Against Sewage Pollution and the Henley Mermaids, We Own It have called on the government to bring Thames Water back into public ownership.

If the government took Thames Water into special administration – on the basis that it could no longer furnish its responsibilities to customers – campaigners argue that its debts could be written off.

The concept of a ‘debt haircut’ underlies this proposal. This means creditors agree to accept less than the full value of their loans to help the company restructure and survive.

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This shifts the financial burden to creditors and shareholders, not taxpayers. But full debt write-offs are rare: it is unlikely the government would pursue this course of action.

All of this comes as the UK’s environment watchdog found that the previous Westminster government and regulators have broken the law by not punishing water companies that spill sewage.

Water companies are allowed to release sewage after heavy rains overwhelm their Victorian-era infrastructure – but in recent years, the number of spills during dry periods has surged.

Water companies released sewage 6,000 times into rivers and seas in 2022 when it wasn’t raining, the BBC found.

And last week, Thames Water revealed 359 so-called ‘category one to three’ pollution incidents in the six months to 30 September, an increase of 40% on the same period the previous year.

The total number of spills surged to 17,564 between January and September, compared to 12,428 a year previously.

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The government’s environment department Defra, and the Environment Agency said that they are carefully “considering the allegations”.

“For too long, water companies have pumped record levels of sewage into our rivers, lakes and seas,” a Defra spokesperson said. “[The new government elected in July] has acted decisively to refresh outdated guidance to make extremely clear our expectations.”

If they accept the OEP’s finding, it could mean that water companies are required to invest more in infrastructure to prevent sewage spills.

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