
Pennon water boss lands nearly £200,000 in share bonuses despite losses
The water firm's annual report revealed that chief executive Susan Davy was handed £191,000 in long-term share awards, with a total annual pay package of £803,000.
She had already faced criticism from MPs when she revealed in February that her pay had risen to £511,000 in 2024-25, from £492,000 the previous year in the wake of a parasite outbreak in Devon and rising cases of sewage spills.
Pennon, which also owns supplier SES Water, recently reported losses widening to £72.7 million for the year to the end of March from £9.1 million losses the previous year.
Last year's incident in Brixham, south Devon, cost it about £21 million and pushed it deeper into an annual loss.
An outbreak of cryptosporidium – a parasite that causes infection – in the water supply left some people in hospital, while more than 100 others reported symptoms including diarrhoea.
Pennon also hit customers with eye-watering bill hikes in April as part of sector-wide increases.
Bills for South West Water customers surged by 28% on average from April, while bills for Bristol Water and Sutton and East Surrey (SES) customers rose by 5% and 3% respectively.
In its annual report, Pennon said the share bonus was paid in relation to the 2022 long-term scheme and insisted it was 'not paid for by customers'.
The shares will also be subject to a two-year holding period and therefore not released until 2027.
'Overall, the committee concluded that the outcomes represented a fair reflection of performance over the period,' it said.
Pennon added in the report that the share award was 'deemed to be proportionate', adding that issues such as the Brixham water incident 'had already been recognised in the forgoing of annual bonuses in 2023/24'.
Ms Davy's saw her overall pay edge down from £812,000 in 2023-24 as her long-term share bonus was lower than the £250,000 awarded in the previous year.
The group also said it had decided not to give Ms Davy an annual bonus for 2024-25 until there was further clarity following the Water (Special Measures) Act and 'the additional performance criteria that need to be achieved before a bonus can be paid'.
Pennon said it was currently looking into overhauling pay for top bosses and consulting on the matter.
The group said: 'Despite being amongst the largest FTSE 250 companies when ranked by market capitalisation… pay for the chief executive is around the bottom 10% of the group.
'This is not a credible or sustainable position.
'The misalignment of CEO pay became very apparent when we were recruiting the chief financial officer, as many credible external candidates had pay expectations that exceeded the pay levels for our chief executive.'

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


Reuters
12 hours ago
- Reuters
FTSE 100 ekes out gains amid global rally on US rate cut optimism
Aug 13 (Reuters) - Britain's FTSE 100 closed higher on Wednesday, reaching a one-week peak, as expectations of a U.S. Federal Reserve interest rate cut buoyed demand for risk assets globally. The blue-chip index (.FTSE), opens new tab finished 0.2% higher, marking its third consecutive day of gains, while the domestically focused midcap FTSE 250 index (.FTMC), opens new tab ended little changed. European bourses outperformed the FTSE 100 as losses in energy and financial stocks weighed on the London's benchmark. Global equities rallied following Tuesday's U.S. inflation data, which aligned with expectations and strengthened confidence in a September rate cut by the Fed, propelling Wall Street to record highs. This positive sentiment also lifted British markets, with healthcare stocks (.FTNMX201030), opens new tab leading gains, up 2.7%. Contrasting with U.S. optimism, British labour data on Tuesday revealed weak hiring alongside persistent wage growth - complicating the Bank of England's balancing act between economic slowdown and stubborn inflation. Markets now anticipate a delayed BoE rate cut in November. Next on the market's radar will be Thursday's gross domestic product data, which economists expect to show the British economy expanded by 0.1% in the three months to June. Investors' focus will also be on Friday's high-stakes talks between U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin regarding a potential deal to end the conflict in Ukraine. A gauge of Britain's energy companies (.FTNMX601010), opens new tab declined 0.6% as oil prices fell more than 1% in the day, though losses were limited after U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent indicated sanctions against Russia or secondary tariffs could increase if Friday's meeting disappoints. Meanwhile, financials weakened with the non-life insurers index (.FTNMX303020), opens new tab falling 3.5%. Beazley (BEZG.L), opens new tab tumbled 12.3% in its worst one-day decline in nearly five years, after it lowered its annual premium growth forecast, partly hurt by subdued demand for its cyber and property risk insurance. Among other movers, infrastructure products maker Hill & Smith (HILS.L), opens new tab topped the gains on the midcap index, rising 10.2%, after its half-yearly results and announcement of a share buyback programme.


BBC News
15 hours ago
- BBC News
Yorkshire Water hosepipe ban could be extended to businesses
The hosepipe ban imposed on Yorkshire Water customers could be extended to businesses as drought conditions continue, the company million of the firm's customers have faced hose restrictions since 11 July, amid a prolonged spell of warm and dry weather in the and businesses such as car washes are currently exempt from the ban, but Yorkshire Water said further restrictions were a possibility with little let-up in the warm Shaw, Yorkshire Water's head of water production, said: "We are working incredibly hard to avoid the need for that." A spokesperson for Yorkshire Water said reservoir levels had not increased since said: "Normally our groundwater sources and reservoirs get topped up over spring when the weather is changeable but this year we've had the driest spring on record and Yorkshire is officially in drought."Currently, businesses are allowed to use a hosepipe if it is "directly related to the use of water for commercial purposes".Discussing further restrictions, Mr Shaw said: "It's something we will follow closely in terms of how the weather conditions change [and] what the reservoir levels are like."It's still an option."Restrictions on water use for many come after the company increased bills by almost 30% in October, the Environment Agency reported that 21% of Yorkshire Water's supplies were lost due to leakage, higher than the national average of 19%."We get the fact it's a frustrating time for customers," said Mr Shaw."The increases are going towards a huge, huge investment programme we have got planned over the next five years."He said the programme included £8.3m of investment in "infrastructure and services to improve things like leakage and water quality". Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.


The Independent
17 hours ago
- The Independent
Balfour Beatty profits lift as it eyes boost from UK construction projects
Infrastructure giant Balfour Beatty has announced stronger profits after a boost from its UK construction arm, which it expects to be supported further by new projects. It came as boss Leo Quinn delivered his final results for the firm. He is stepping down as chief executive after almost 11 years transforming its operations. On Wednesday, the FTSE 250 company said it is on track to meet its profit forecasts for this year and is targeting 'growth' in 2026. It reported that pre-tax profits grew to £132 million for the first half of the year, up from £112 million a year earlier. Balfour Beatty said it was supported by 'strong' profitability in its UK construction and support services operations. Mr Quinn said its UK business saw profit margins reach target levels more quickly than expected because of Government efforts to speed up infrastructure projects and planning reform. He said: 'Recent UK Government announcements confirm a deep pipeline of major infrastructure projects which closely align with the group's unique expert capabilities and will further enhance the quality of the future order book.' However, the company said it saw weaker profitability from its US construction arm over the half-year because of issues facing interstate highway projects in Texas. Mr Quinn added: 'Our continuing strong cash generation is underpinned by a growing order book with improved margins and lower risk contract forms. 'This provides the board with increasing confidence in significant future cash generation that supports our ongoing dividends and share buybacks. 'This is demonstrated by the momentum in our key growth areas in the first half.' Shares in Balfour Beatty were 2.8% lower.