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The regulator Ofwat sets limits on how much water companies can increase their prices. ... with Thames Water customers facing an increase of £99 or 23%, Anglian customers looking at £66 or 13% ...
The UK’s biggest water company will put it’s prices up by 35 per cent over the next five years, down from the 53 per cent that was requested. ... 17 December 2024 (EPA) ... But if Thames Water ...
Household water bills in England and Wales are to rise by an average of £123 from April 1, equating to an increase of around £10 a month. The rise, confirmed by industry body Water UK, will take ...
Bill rises for all companies until 2030 have already been announced by the regulator Ofwat, with Thames Water bills rising from an average £435.56 to £534.79 – a 22.8 per cent increase.
On 1 June 2024, Thames Water was set to be fined over £40m by Ofwat for payment of a shareholder dividend in late 2023. [47] On 11 July 2024, Ofwat put Thames Water into special measures, with a "turnaround oversight regime" subject to "heightened regulatory" scrutiny. Ofwat said Thames Water would be allowed to increase bills by £99 to £535 ...
Thames Water, England’s biggest ... 2024 at 9:27 AM. ... The dispute comes as the company faces a decision from regulator Ofwat this week over whether it can increase bills by 59% over the next ...
Average water bills (excluding sanitation) were 295 euro per year in England and Wales, higher than in Germany, France (85 euro) or Italy (59 euro). [17] From April 2023, household bills in England and Wales were to rise to an average of £448 a year, the largest increase in almost 20 years. [18]
In 1947 the Metropolitan Water Board proposed to construct a new water treatment works between Ashford and Sunbury-on-Thames, Surrey, (51.41772°N 0.43802°W). The works would draw water from the adjacent Queen Mary Reservoir through a tunnel 100-inches (2.54 metres) diameter or from the Staines Reservoir Aqueduct.