logo
Water sector suffering from ‘deep-rooted' failures, review warns

Water sector suffering from ‘deep-rooted' failures, review warns

Independent4 days ago

The water sector is beset with 'deep-rooted, systemic' failures, and needs fundamental reform of laws, regulation and infrastructure, a review has warned.
The Independent Water Commission was tasked by the UK and Welsh governments to carry out the largest review of the sector since privatisation in the face of widespread public anger over pollution, bills and bosses' bonuses although ministers ruled out nationalising water companies.
Its interim report has been published as Britain's biggest water company Thames Water is again facing the spectre of temporary nationalisation after private equity firm KKR pulled out of plans for a £3 billion bailout.
Another of England's private water firms, South West Water, reported widening financial losses after an outbreak of a parasite in water supplies cost it millions.
And water supplies are under pressure after the driest spring in decades has left farmers struggling and millions of households facing the possibility of hosepipe bans, while ministers have warned climate change, a rising population and crumbling infrastructure is putting future supplies at risk.
In the interim report published on Tuesday, the commission said multiple issues need to be tackled to rebuild public trust in the ailing sector.
It called for regulator Ofwat's role to be strengthened and for the watchdog to adopt a more 'supervisory' approach to oversight of water firms.
Former Bank of England deputy governor Sir Jon Cunliffe, who led the review into the water sector in England and Wales, told the BBC that more effective regulation was a huge part of solving the problem, with a regulator that could step in early before things got worse.
He said: 'Because when they get worse, as you can see, they are very difficult to sort out, and we need an environmental regulator with the capability to monitor and enforce.'
He also said that having regulators with different remits and responsibilities for different parts of the process had made the water system 'expensive and incoherent'.
The interim review urges the Government to provide clearer long-term direction on what is needed from the water system, and warns key elements of current legislation are 'badly in need of review and rationalisation'.
It proposes greater regional decision-making around local water systems, and emphasises the need for a greater focus on long-term, responsible investment and ownership within the industry.
It is also considering new standards for the water sector's crumbling infrastructure, warning there is insufficient understanding of the health of assets such as pipes and water treatment plants.
Companies should plan for long-term resilience of 'critical assets', not simply fix things when they fail, it warned.
Sir Jon said: 'There is no simple, single change, no matter how radical, that will deliver the fundamental reset that is needed for the water sector.
'We have heard of deep-rooted, systemic and interlocking failures over the years – failure in Government's strategy and planning for the future, failure in regulation to protect both the billpayer and the environment and failure by some water companies and their owners to act in the public, as well as their private, interest.
'My view is that all of these issues need to be tackled to rebuild public trust and make the system fit for the future. We anticipate that this will require new legislation.'
Anger has been growing over the polluted state of rivers, lakes and coastal waters, leaks and sewage spills at the same time as significant shareholder payouts and bosses' bonuses, and bills which were hiked in April to pay for investment to fix creaking infrastructure.
On Tuesday, Thames Water announced private equity giant KKR has pulled out of plans to invest in the company, in the latest blow to the struggling and heavily indebted utility.
Thames Water – which supplies 16 million customers – had hoped KKR would invest more than £3 billion of new equity amid fears the supplier was running out of cash, and its withdrawal from the deal raises the spectre of a temporary government nationalisation once more.
And South West Water's owner Pennon has reported widening losses after a parasite outbreak in Brixham, South Devon, cost it around £21 million.
The outbreak put some people in hospital and left thousands of homes without safe drinking water – some for weeks.
Though the interim review points to the need for better regulation of water companies, it does not recommend the wholesale scrapping of watchdog Ofwat which some have urged, and nationalisation – which some campaigners have called for – was excluded from its terms of reference.
Environment Secretary Steve Reed said he had commissioned the water commission to outline recommendations for a 'once in a generation' opportunity to transform the water industry and delivered for the public.
'The Government will respond to the Commission in full in due course and outline next steps to benefit customers, attract investment, and clean up our waterways for good,' he said.
Environmental campaigners called for the final report, expected later in the summer, to reshape the water sector to put public health and the environment first – and for the Government to implement ambitious reforms.
Richard Benwell, chief executive of the Wildlife and Countryside Link (WCL), a coalition of 89 nature organisations demanded: 'politicians must stop equivocating and set clear strategic direction for environmental recovery'.
Giles Bristow, chief executive of Surfers Against Sewage, said: 'The criminal behaviour, chronic lack of investment and woeful mismanagement which has led to sewage filled seas is a direct result of our profit-driven system.
'This interim report begins to recognise this, but as yet does not spell out the need to end pollution for profit.
'The commission's final recommendations must reshape the water industry to put public health and the environment first.'
A spokesperson for industry body Water UK said: 'Everyone agrees that the water industry is not working.
'We hope this report will be a starting point for the fundamental reforms the sector needs.
'We need a less complicated system which allows investment to get quickly to where it needs to go,' they said, adding the sector was spending £104 billion in the next five years to secure water supplies, cut sewage and support economic growth.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The major change Daniel Dubois has made to ensure ‘the greatest victory in boxing history' against Oleksandr Usyk
The major change Daniel Dubois has made to ensure ‘the greatest victory in boxing history' against Oleksandr Usyk

The Independent

time31 minutes ago

  • The Independent

The major change Daniel Dubois has made to ensure ‘the greatest victory in boxing history' against Oleksandr Usyk

Confidence in the Daniel Dubois' camp is unwavering ahead of his rematch with Oleksandr Usyk. Dubois is more confident than anyone, seemingly counting down the days until he can ink 'undisputed heavyweight champion of the world' on his CV. 'I'm raring to go – get ready for the greatest victory in boxing history,' the Brooks athlete says, relaxing into a leather sofa after a few rounds of performative padwork – all-out efforts are saved for when he is behind closed doors. Catch all the latest boxing action on DAZN But while boxing is the prototypical individual sport, it is now a team game. And Dubois' team for this fight has grown to new heights, ensuring no stone is left unturned in his preparations for the heavyweight clash. 'This is only done at the top level,' says trainer Don Charles, who sits at the helm. 'I've been in the coaching industry for 25 years, and I've trained other high-profile boxers. This is the first time the team has grown to where we're getting all of this support: nutritional advice, a doctor present at training. That's unheard of, having a doctor present at training sessions. He adds: 'It's because this is the pinnacle. It doesn't get any higher than this, contesting for the undisputed. Daniel is a part of history, and we are all involved in it.' Among his team are Dr Ravi Gill and physiotherapist Tom Kopelman, who have been brought in from Premier League side Tottenham Hotspur. 'Our main remit is illness and injury prevention, recovery optimisation, and giving Don Charles the best possible version of Daniel Dubois every day,' Gill says. As well as taking precautions to avoid a repeat of Dubois' illness-caused withdrawal from his Joseph Parker fight, Gill stays ringside to keep tabs on metrics such as heart rate variability, blood oxygen levels, heart rate and more via a chest-worn monitor. His summary: 'I've worked with elite athletes and World Cup winners, and Daniel has the best physique I've seen. He goes on: 'It's impressive how well he recovers. His heart rate goes up when sparring and training, then it comes down again really efficiently. He can go 18 rounds, no problem.' Recovery is another big focus, physio Kopelman adds. Alongside prehab work and strengthening exercises to build a buffer against injury, he employs several techniques to allow Dubois to bounce back from tough 20-round training days. 'Recovery can involve lots of different things,' Kopelman explains, 'and it's very individual, so it's [about] finding what works for the athlete to make sure they're ready. Everyone talks about improving the one per cents, but even if you can improve things by 0.1 per cent, it adds up. Sleeping is a huge part of that, he says. 'You can have the best ice bath in the world, but it means nothing if you don't sleep well. Then there's an individual aspect to being an athlete. You have to be happy.' Dubois does seem happy, and remarkably at ease. After leaving the ring, he is led through some stretches, then unflinchingly lowers his imposing frame into a tub of freezing cold water. A torrent of ice cube-laden liquid is displaced onto the floor in the process. As eyebrows raise over his lack of reaction, he laughs, submerges his head, then reemerges with a laugh: 'It gets easier over time,' he says. Rather than the act itself becoming easier, he might simply be getting better at it. Most would agree this is mirrored in his career, with Dubois growing in composure, guile and ability with each passing fight. This, twinned with his team's fastidious preparations for the Usyk fight, means we are likely to see the best version of Daniel Dubois to date on Saturday, 19 July. For boxing fans across the world, this is an exciting prospect. Watch the very best boxing with a DAZN subscription DAZN is the home of combat sports, broadcasting over 185 fights a year from the world's best promoters, including Matchroom, Queensberry, Golden Boy, Misfits, PFL, BKFC, GLORY and more. An Annual Saver subscription is a one-off cost of £119.99 / $224.99 (for 12 months access), that's just 64p / $1.21 per fight. There is also a Monthly Flex Pass option (cancel any time) at £24.99 / $29.99 per month. A subscription includes weekly magazine shows, comprehensive fight library, exclusive interviews, behind-the-scenes documentaries, and podcasts and vodcasts.

‘How did it get to this?' What happens when care in a residential home breaks down
‘How did it get to this?' What happens when care in a residential home breaks down

The Guardian

time34 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

‘How did it get to this?' What happens when care in a residential home breaks down

'If we had known what was really going on, we'd have taken her out of there straight away,' said Greg Gillespie. 'It makes you question your decision-making. But the real shame of this is we just didn't know. It was hidden so well.' Gillespie's elderly grandmother lived at The Firs, a Nottinghamshire care home that was dramatically shut down by the Care Quality Commission in April due to a catalogue of shocking failures – everything from meeting nutritional and hydration needs, staffing, equipment, fire safety and governance was found to be lacking. The CQC found people were at 'serious risk of harm from overdose' due to poor medicine management, while some were at 'increased risk of developing pressure sores and ulcers', and one person was 'at risk of choking from not having their immediate needs met'. The people living in the care home, who were elderly, vulnerable or receiving end-of-life care, were evacuated in ambulances by the council into the early hours of the morning. One person who was receiving palliative care died within hours of the move. Soon after, the home in Lowdham – which housed 11 people with dementia and physical disabilities – went into liquidation. Staff lost their jobs and have been left with wages unpaid, and many residents are owed thousands of pounds in fees – people paid from £1,250 a week to live there. 'People must be held accountable for this. I don't think anyone who can run a home like this should be allowed to work in the care sector ever again,' said Gillespie, a corporate investigator more accustomed to turning his hand to international cases of public office bribery and fraud than care homes. He is compiling a dossier of evidence on what went wrong at The Firs and why it took so long to act on whistleblowing complaints, which he plans to submit to his local MP and the health secretary. 'I won't be letting the matter go, not just for my own relative and the staff who lost their jobs, but out of principle, because no one's loved ones or their families should have to go through this,' he said. 'I think this situation is so unique and appalling it needs to be looked at a higher level.' Emma Locking's 87-year-old grandfather, Tim, who has dementia, lived at the home. She said her family were shocked when they received a call at 5.30pm on a Friday saying the home was being shut down with immediate effect. 'Obviously my nan, at 85, was panicking, thinking: 'Oh my God, now he's homeless,'' she said. 'It was really stressful. It's awful for all the residents. These are people in their 80s and 90s. Some of them didn't even have family to help. I just think the way it was all handled was disgusting.' They had held concerns about the home for a while, particularly after Tim was left for 15 hours with an open wound on his wrist after a fall in December. His family said they were not informed of the seriousness of the injury until the next morning, when staff asked them to take him to hospital for stitches. When they arrived to pick him up, one staff member said the wound had been 'like a bloodbath'. 'I said: 'Why the hell did no one tell us this last night?' I would have taken him in. The wound was horrific,' she said. 'He's diabetic. He's on blood thinners. He's 87 years old. He could have died from that cut because he could have got sepsis. It makes you think: would he have been better off at home?' She said her grandfather's medication was not stored correctly and was often out of date, and he suffered two other falls at the home due to faulty or missing equipment. Her family considered raising concerns with the CQC, but worried about the repercussions for Tim while he lived there. The CQC report on the failures at The Firs found a number of serious safety breaches. A fridge used to store medicine, including insulin and antibiotics, had been switched off for five days with no one noticing, meaning the medicine may have become ineffective. Errors and a lack of training led to frequent overdoses – three residents received above the maximum dose of their pain relief, putting them at 'serious risk of harm'. Others weren't receiving medication regularly, including one person on end-of-life care. People with dementia had unsupervised access to unlocked doors, leading outside to a busy road and to a retaining wall that had been taped off as it was at risk of collapse. Fire exits were blocked, and there was no equipment to transport two people living upstairs with mobility issues down in an emergency. The home's manager was absent for long periods of time. The findings didn't come as a surprise to many of the staff at The Firs, some of whom had been raising concerns for months. One care worker, who asked to remain anonymous, said in the four years they had worked there only two fire drills were carried out. 'It was scary. No one knew how to get the residents downstairs if there was a fire,' they said. 'The whole time I was there, we only had two fire drills and we failed both of them – and we didn't get more training on it.' Another care worker, Megan O'Neill, said she had been pressed into taking on medication duties due to staff shortages, but wasn't given proper training. 'I was just chucked into it. I didn't really feel comfortable about it and they knew that,' she said. She claims she was unfairly dismissed when she left a shift early due to poor mental health exacerbated by the pressure of providing medication without training, and later reported her concerns to the CQC. Another care worker said one person was given double the amount of morphine they should have received and it was simply 'brushed under the carpet'. Across the country there are concerns that increasing strain on the care home industry is leading to deteriorating levels of care, and could lead to more emergency closures. 'Seeing this CQC report, it's horrendous, but some of it is stuff that we're hearing quite often every day,' said Helen Wildbore, the director of Care Rights UK, which runs a national advice line for older people with care issues. 'Closed cultures and institutionalisation is on the increase. Staff don't have the time and the resources to give personalised care. And that is having an impact on people not being able to live with dignity, basic rights being breached and relatives experiencing anxiety, more stress and unnecessary trauma.' Staff shortages, a lack of funding and the rise in national insurance contributions were all playing their part in pushing the sector to breaking point, Wildbore said. She added that failures by the CQC, which the health secretary, Wes Streeting, described as 'not fit for purpose' last year, were exacerbating the situation and leaving poor care unchecked for long periods of time. 'They're supposed to be setting minimum standards and making sure they're there, but they can only do that if they're responding when people raise concerns and actually crossing that threshold to see with their own eyes what's happening,' she said. The Firs was previously rated 'requires improvement' at its last full CQC inspection in February 2021, four years before the one that led to its closure, with many family members questioning why it took so long for it to revisit when there were known issues. 'How did it get to this? Why didn't the CQC intervene earlier?' said Gillespie. The Firs has been contacted for comment. James Bullion, the CQC's interim chief inspector of adult social care and integrated care, said: 'Following an inspection in April 2025 of The Firs care home in Lowdham, we took action to suspend the registration of the home for three months following concerns we had around safety, care planning and oversight of the service. 'We have since been informed that the provider has gone into liquidation. We are considering if any further action needs to be taken. Care homes are people's homes and everyone living there deserves to be treated with dignity and respect – and to be listened to. We will continue to hold providers to account where we find this is not the case.'

Throat cancer patient praises new Salisbury District Hospital kit
Throat cancer patient praises new Salisbury District Hospital kit

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

Throat cancer patient praises new Salisbury District Hospital kit

A throat cancer patient has praised new equipment at Salisbury District Hospital for making an uncomfortable procedure more bearable for Russell, 67, from Maiden Bradley, was diagnosed with squamous cell carcinoma in November 2019 after discovering a lump in his throat. Since then, he has undergone monthly check-ups using videoscopes to monitor his condition - a procedure he once described as feeling like going "a couple of rounds with Mike Tyson".With funding from the Stars Appeal, the hospital's charity, six new videoscopes which cut appointment times have been purchased at a cost of £115,000. These devices allow for quicker and more comfortable diagnoses for patients with suspected head and neck their introduction in September, more than 1,600 patients referred with suspected head and neck cancers have benefitted from their use. 'Felt like a punch' Mr Russell said: "I am well used to this unpleasant procedure, but the new cameras make it so much more comfortable. For new patients, they will significantly reduce the fear of having it done."He added: "The new cameras made the procedure so much easier to manage. Sometimes it used to feel like being punched in the nose."The upgraded scopes also offer doctors much clearer images, helping them to detect changes in patients over time. This is particularly important for people like Mr Russell, whose cancer has been persistent and unpredictable. "The unique nature of my cancer meant it kept coming and going. This equipment is really important because doctors can now see subtle changes that may signal something's happening," he scopes are part of a new 'one-stop' diagnostic service led by the hospital's Ear, Nose and Throat (ENT) and Maxillofacial can now receive assessments in a single visit, instead of attending multiple departments. ENT consultant Mr Kostas Marinakis said the new equipment has had a major impact. "The superior image quality gives us the best chance of detecting early cancers and significantly improves the comfort of the procedure. "We're extremely grateful to the Stars Appeal supporters for making this possible."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store