Southern Water price hike revealed

The regulator Ofwat has revealed how much bills are going up by over the next five years

Author: Ryan Burrows and Josie Clarke, PAPublished 11th Jul 2024
Last updated 11th Jul 2024

Southern Water customers will be paying more than £36 a year extra on their bills for the next five years, under draft proposals announced by the regulator this morning (Thursday 11th).

Ofwat has said the proposals for increases average at £144 across the country over that time.

However, customers served by the Worthing-based company in Salisbury, Hampshire, the Isle of Wight, Sussex and Kent face a bigger increase, at £183.

Southern Water had previously announced plans to hike bills by 73% earlier this year.

The average rise set out by Ofwat is much lower, at 21%, or around £19 a year for the average customer.

Ofwat chief executive David Black said:

"Customers want to see radical change in the way water companies care for the environment. Our draft decisions on company plans approve a tripling of investment to make sustained improvement to customer service and the environment at a fair price for customers.

"These proposals aim to deliver a 44% reduction in spills from storm overflows compared to levels in 2021. We expect all companies to embrace innovation and go further and faster to reduce spills wherever possible.

"Today's announcement also increases the resilience of our water supplies to the impact of climate change and will reduce how much water is taken from rivers by enabling a range of long-term water supply projects, which includes plans for nine reservoirs.

"Let me be very clear to water companies - we will be closely scrutinising the delivery of their plans and will hold them to account to deliver real improvements to the environment and for customers and on their investment programmes."

Southern Water customers will see their bills go up by more than £180 in the next five years

Mike Keil, chief executive of the Consumer Council for Water (CCW), said:

"Millions of people will feel upset and anxious at the prospect of these water bill rises and question the fairness of them given some water companies' track record of failure and poor service.

"Customers understand investment is urgently needed but they need reassurance that every pound of their money is going to be well spent.

"Trust in water companies has never been lower and that won't change until people see and experience a difference - whether that's having the confidence to swim at their favourite beach or receiving help if they are struggling to pay their bill.

"We estimate about two million households in England and Wales currently cannot afford their water bill and, while the increase in financial assistance is welcome, it falls short of what is needed.

"Over the summer we'll be carrying out research with customers of every water company to gauge whether they feel the regulator's proposals are affordable and deliver what people want. We expect Ofwat to listen and act on what customers tell us."

The proposals are part of the 2024 Price Review (PR24) and cover the period from 1 April 2025 to 31 March 2030, ahead of a final decision at the end of the year.

Ofwat said the average 21% bill increase, around £19 per year, follows firms' proposals to increase their total spending by £29 billion, split between a £5 billion increase in the core costs for running their business and a £24 billion rise in spending to meet requirements set by governments and for other environmental improvements.

Ofwat said its scrutiny of companies' cost proposals, to ensure they deliver efficiently, had led to a £16 billion reduction.

However the proposed bill increases come amid public fury around firms' rampant polluting of waterways with sewage spills as they continue to hand dividends to shareholders, and bonuses to executives - something which Labour has pledged to clamp down on.

Sewage spills into England's rivers and seas more than doubled in 2023.

According to the Environment Agency, there were 3.6 million hours of spills last year - equal to about 400 years - compared with 1.75 million hours in 2022.

The large amount of water lost to leaks in the system also raises widespread concerns, particularly in dry periods when consumers face hosepipe bans.

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