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It owns more than 20,000 miles of water mains and more than 68,000 miles of sewers across London, the Thames Valley and the Home Counties, with approximately 8,000 employees.
The government is scrambling to put together a plan to rescue Thames Water over increasing fears the company is set to go bust.. The utility giant is struggling under a £14 billion debt pile it ...
Thames Water, England’s biggest water company, will run out of money by March if restructuring plans are not approved. ... Under this plan, known as the “A plan”, it could receive a £3 ...
The peak energy consumption of the plant is 17.6 MW in worst-case conditions, and the average power consumption was estimated at 14 MW, which results in an energy usage of 2.27 kWh per cubic metre of water produced. [12] In 2022, Thames Water revised the usable output of the plant down to 100 megalitres per day, because of "unrealistic ...
Built in 1931–36 by Middlesex County Council and now operated by Thames Water, it is the third largest sewage works in the United Kingdom. It treats the waste water from about 1.9 million people served by three main sewers serving more than the northwest quarter of Outer London and two further main sewers from the south and south-west.
In March 2003 Thames Water identified that by 2005 there would be a deficit in water treatment and supply capacity in North London. To address this deficit a new water treatment facility was constructed on 1.5 ha site adjacent to the William Girling reservoir and the A110 road ( 51°38′11″N 0°00′57″W / 51.63629°N 0.01582°W ...
There are fears that if Thames Water collapses, Labour will have no choice but to step in and temporarily renationalise the company at an estimated cost of £38bn to the taxpayer. This includes ...
The troubled firm said customer bills could rise by another £19 to £627 by 2030 under plans to up spend by another £3.1 billion. Thames Water warns of 44% surge in bills under new business ...