
Water industry rich list revealed: how bosses were paid £278m in 11 years as sector faces overhaul amid concern over soaring bills and sewage leaks
Executive pay figures obtained by the Daily Mail show salaries, pensions, benefits and bonuses earned by 57 chief executives and chief finance officers at Britain's 11 major water firms over 11 financial years from 2015.
Over a tenth of the overall sum was paid to one CEO alone - Severn Trent's Liv Garfield, who received nearly £30.9m.
And, of the four water firms which have brought in hosepipe bans after the driest spring in 123 years, Yorkshire Water paid £15m to successive CEOs Richard Flint and Liz Barber.
No executives at struggling Thames Water, which is implementing restrictions in four areas and last week announced losses of £1.65bn in the year to March, made the top 10 of the 'rich list', compiled by the Sewage Campaign Network from public annual reports.
This is because of a regular change of bosses through the 'extremely stressed' company's boardroom – but over £26m was paid to 11 different executives.
At Southern Water, which announced a hosepipe ban on Wednesday, nearly £18.7m was paid to eight executives.
Its biggest earner, former boss Ian McAuley, received over £6m. Mr McAuley also received £1.4m while chief executive of South West Water in 2015-16.
The company's latest annual report published last week showed it nearly doubled the current chief executive's pay package last year despite a government ban on bonuses.
Lawrence Gosden received £1.4m – comprising of £691,000 under a 'two-year long-term incentive plan' (LTIP), on top of fixed pay of £687,000. The company insisted the extra pay was not a bonus.
The 'staggering' figures can be revealed as Environment secretary Steve Reed is to promise 'root and branch' reform and replace existing regulator Ofwat, admitting current regulation 'has failed customers and the environment'.
In his response to today's Independent Water Commission's report, Reed is to pledge customers will 'never again face huge shock hikes' to their bills after average rises of 25pc last year.
Private water companies, many owned by foreign investors and private equity firms, have come under sustained criticism for performance on leaks and sewage dumping as bills soar. Serious pollution incidents rose by 60pc last year.
Prof Becky Malby, of the Sewage Campaign Network, said of the pay figures: 'It's unbelievable that a service which is a monopoly industry is creaming off this much for its chief executives and chief financial officers.
'The outgoing chief executive of the NHS earned £270,000 a year when it is a complex and difficult organisation to run.'
Meanwhile, Lib Dem environment spokesman Tim Farron said: 'These figures are staggering and people will be rightly furious that these execs are lining their pockets as water bills skyrocket and their companies destroy our local environment with filthy sewage.'
The Sewage Campaign Network's rich list can be as the Independent Water Commission, headed retired civil servant Sir Jon Cunliffe, published a scathing report, recommending new legislation and tighter regulation but stopping short of taking the industry back into public ownership.
The Sewage Campaign Network - backed by academics and campaigners including Feargal Sharkey - has put together its own 'People's Commission' report into the water industry, calling for measures including renationalisation.
The campaign said Sir Jon's report 'fails to deliver an ambitious transformation of water' and that 'fundamental problems' remain.
It said: 'Privatisation is more expensive than public ownership - debt is much more expensive, servicing overseas financial interests is expensive. Currently 21-53% of our water bills are used to pay off water company debt.'
The campaign added: 'No amount of restructuring regulation will enable government to manage the water companies' primary motive which is profit, and financial return to shareholders.'
Last week, it emerged the water industry watchdog warned six firms not to raise directors' salaries to get around a sweeping bonus ban.
Ofwat said it would be 'watching closely' after barring United Utilities, Thames Water, Wessex Water, Anglian Water, Southern Water and Yorkshire Water from making performance-related payouts.
Since they were privatised debt-free in 1989, the utilities have paid out £85 billion in dividends and are now drowning in £60billion of debt, while household bills have almost doubled in real terms.
Customers face hikes of up to 53 per cent before inflation over the next five years to pay for infrastructure repairs.
In a speech in February, Sir Jon said: 'It would be very difficult to say now that we have a water sector in which the public have trust.'
A Water UK spokesperson, representing the private water firms, said: 'Executive pay in the water industry is independently determined by remuneration committees, which abide by laws and regulations.
'Water companies are focused on investing a record £104 billion over the next five years to secure our water supplies, end sewage entering our rivers and seas and support economic growth.'
Who's who... the highest-earning water bosses as revealed by campaigners
Liv Garfield, chief executive of Severn Trent Water since 2014, has earned £30.9m since 2015.
The 49-yar-old became the youngest female CEO of a FTSE-100 company when she was appointed to the top job at Severn Trent in 2014, aged 38.
She received a CBE for services to the water industry in 2020 – the same year Environment Agency figures showed the equivalent of 64 years' worth of raw sewage was dumped into rivers and streams.
Ms Garfield was previously an executive at BT, where we CEO of its Openreach division between 2011 and 2013. In 2013, Fortune Magazine identified her as 'one of the world's fastest-rising corporate stars'.
Steve Mogford, 69, CEO United Utilities 2011-2023, earned £21.3m over eight years between 2015 and 2023.
Mr Mogford was previously a Chief Operating Officer for Programmes at BAE Systems plc, where he worked for 30 years.
He now holds roles including a partial return to defence as a senior independent director of military supplier QinetiQ Group.
Peter Simpson, 58, CEO Anglian Water since 2013, earned £15.8m since 2015.
Mr Simpson worked his way up within the company having been an executive there for the last 21 years, being COO from 2004 and appointed managing director in 2010.
He is a founding member and co-chair of the Prince of Wales's Corporate Leaders Group in the UK and was a chairman of industry body Water UK in 2012/13.
James Bowling, 56, CFO Severn Trent 2015 to retirement in 2023, earned £12m since 2015.
Has a background in motoring having spent nine years at Ford. Mr Bowling was then at pharmaceutical company Shire PLC before moving to Severn Trent.
Susan Davy, 56, chief executive South West Water for last five years, previously chief financial officer, earned £11.1m in the two roles.
Ms Davy announced her retirement earlier this month. Details of her earnings come as South West Water is set to be forced to spend £24m under an 'enforcement package' imposed by regulator Ofwat, mostly to improve storm overflows to reduce sewage spills.
View the Rich List in full at www.sewagecampaignnetwork.org.uk.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
44 minutes ago
- The Independent
Peter Mandelson enlisted help to return to Tony Blair's government
Newly released official files reveal the extent of Peter Mandelson 's determination to re-enter government after twice being forced to resign from Tony Blair 's cabinet. The papers, made public by the National Archives in Kew, west London, show that Mr Mandelson even sought the assistance of Lord Birt, the former BBC director general, in his bid to secure a senior position. Mr Mandelson had been compelled to step down as Northern Ireland secretary in January 2001 amid allegations he had facilitated a UK passport for controversial Indian businessman Srichand Hinduja, in connection with the Millennium Dome. This followed an earlier resignation over an undeclared home loan from fellow Labour minister Geoffrey Robinson. Despite an official inquiry clearing him of impropriety in the Hinduja affair, Mr Blair was hesitant to reinstate his long-time ally, given his prior departures. However, in April 2003, Lord Birt, then a senior policy adviser in No 10, wrote to the prime minister, urging him to reconsider. Mr Mandelson's persistence was ultimately rewarded when Mr Blair appointed him Britain's commissioner to the European Commission in Brussels, with responsibility for trade. 'I gather from Peter that you still talk to him regularly – but, as a safeguard, you may like to know what he reports to me about his current state of mind,' he wrote. 'He feels this spring/summer may be the moment of decision for him. He's approaching 50 – and he is sorely conscious that time is passing and he has yet to fulfil his promise. 'As you know, Peter's deepest wish is to return to government. He stresses that he has already proved to be a capable minister, and that he would be a strong ally for you in cabinet. 'If you judge a return to government is not possible, then he would like you to consider appointing him as EC Commissioner. 'One way or another, he says he wants to settle his future this year, even if it means a career outside politics.' Just four months later, it was announced that he was to be the UK's next European commissioner. He was subsequently awarded a life peerage in 2008 and is currently the British Ambassador to the United States.


The Independent
44 minutes ago
- The Independent
British Business Bank returns to profit amid further investments
The Government-owned British Business Bank has returned to a profit as it pushes forward with efforts to support Chancellor Rachel Reeves' ambitious growth plans. The UK's economic development bank recorded a pre-tax profit of £144 million in the year to March, swinging a £122 million loss a year earlier. It is the first profit the bank has delivered since 2022 after the valuation of firms it invested in were impacted by challenging economic conditions. In its latest set of annual accounts, the British Business Bank said its investments and funding activities are expected to have created around 38,000 additional jobs. The bank, which lends money to and buys stakes in smaller UK businesses to help them start and grow, supported £6.8 billion worth of funding agreements during the latest year. It said this included £1.2 billion worth of its public funding, £2.6 billion of guaranteed lending and a further £3 billion of private capital. The return to profitability and increased funding agreements come amid efforts from the Government to accelerate economic growth across the UK. The Government agreed to increase the bank's financial capacity to £25.6 billion in order to help it increase annual investments to around £2.5 billion a year and to gather more third-party capital. Louis Taylor, chief executive of the British Business Bank, said: 'In a busy and productive 2024/25, the British Business Bank amplified its role, delivering significant impact in driving economic growth and innovation and playing its part in the economic transformation of the UK's Nations and regions. 'At the same time, we have undertaken a significant reshaping of our organisation to prepare for an expanded mandate and long-term ambitions. 'Having an economic development bank with permanent capital and a consistent risk appetite, underpinning the UK venture and growth market through its cycles, is a powerful and very positive development.' Stephen Welton, chairman of the organisation, said: 'With a proven track record on a nationwide basis in driving economic growth, innovation and jobs, over the next 10 years we expect the British Business Bank to become a far more visible and recognisable institution, firmly embedded in the national narrative of smaller business growth and success.'


The Independent
44 minutes ago
- The Independent
Tony Blair urged to pay back almost £10,000 for discounts on designer clothes, records show
Prime minister Tony Blair was advised to repay thousands of pounds in discounts which he received on designer clothes, according to newly-released official files. Papers released to the National Archives show that No 10 officials recommended he should pay back more than £7,600 on items bought from designers Nicole Farhi and Paul Smith. The discounts were negotiated by his wife Cherie's controversial friend and style adviser, Carole Caplin, who bought clothes for Mrs Blair. Ms Caplin told officials that because she bought the clothes wholesale she was able to to secure discounts of up to 60 per cent – including on items bought for Mr Blair as well. However, officials were concerned that such large discounts would not be available to ordinary members of the public. According to the files, between July 2001 to December 2002 the couple spent £8,021.50 with one designer alone – Nicole Farhi – when the retail price would have been £20,855. It meant the total discount they received came to £12,8343, more than the total amount they spent. Initially, officials advised that Mr Blair should repay the discounts he received in full – around £10,000 – and that Mrs Blair should pay back half the benefits she obtained – £28,000. Clare Sumner, a No 10 official, wrote: 'We are not arguing that anything has been done wrong, indeed nothing has. The issue is one of public perception.' However, after discussions with the cabinet secretary Sir Andrew Turnbull it was agreed that Mrs Blair did not receive any 'preferential or beneficial treatment' in her role as prime minister's wife. It was agreed, however, that the suppliers would in future have to sign confidentiality agreements to ensure there was no incentive for them to provide goods cheaply in order to exploit the fact they the prime minister's wife wore their clothes. But for Mr Blair, however, officials said they believed he still should pay the full amount, advising him to write cheques for to £1,116 to Paul Smith and £6,532 to Nicole Farhi. Ms Sumner wrote: 'For you, we still think the simplest thing is to pay for your clothes in full and that Carole should be made aware of this for the future.'