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Water supply and sanitation in the United Kingdom

Public water supply and sanitation in the United Kingdom is characterised by universal access and generally good service quality. A salient feature of the sector in the United Kingdom compared to other developed countries is the diversity of institutional arrangements between the constituting parts of the UK (England and Wales; Scotland; and Northern Ireland), which are each described in separate articles, while this article is devoted to some common issues across the United Kingdom.

United Kingdom: Water and Sanitation
Data
Access to an improved water source 100% (2015)[1]
Access to improved sanitation 99% (2015)[1]
Continuity of supply (%) 100%
Average urban water use (l/c/d) 150
Average urban domestic water and sewer bill for 20m3 n/a
Share of household metering 33% (2008) [2]
Non-revenue water 20% (2010–2011) [3]
Share of collected wastewater treated 100%
Annual investment in WSS n/a
Share of self-financing by utilities n/a
Share of tax-financing n/a
Share of external financing n/a
Institutions
Decentralization to municipalities No
National water and sanitation company None
Water and sanitation regulator Three regulators, one each for England/Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland
Responsibility for policy setting
Sector law None
Number of service providers 28

History edit

Historically, water for drinking, general use, or sewerage was largely left to private arrangements.[4] The recurrence of water poisoning, and large public health crises were a part of people's ordinary existence until scientific advances of the 19th century. After the Broad Street cholera outbreak of 1854, John Snow first identified the cause of cholera as drinking water being polluted by excrement. Following the Great Stink of 1858, where the River Thames had become so bad smelling that it offended the Queen and forced Parliament to relocate, Joseph Bazalgette began to build the London sewerage system.

Starting with the Public Health Act 1848 (11 & 12 Vict. c. 63) and its creation of a local board of health in each council, and the Public Health Act 1866, local government built drains, sewers, and began piping clean water to households. The Waterworks Clauses Act 1847 and the Waterworks Clauses Act 1863 provided model constitutions for the dozens of spreading private and local government water companies. The Public Health Act 1875 (38 & 39 Vict. c. 55) required all new houses to have running water and internal drainage. By 1944, there were over 1000 water suppliers in England and Wales, though 26 supplied half, and 97 a further quarter of total volume.[5] The Water Act 1945 organised a national water supply policy, before the Water Act 1973 finally organised ten regional water authorities for England and Wales, and additional authorities in Scotland and Northern Ireland.[6] However, following other privatisations, the Water Act 1989 changed the ten authorities into ten private water companies, each with a local monopoly, subject to price caps of a new regulator known as Ofwat.[7]

Scottish Water, after a public campaign remained publicly owned, and as a result has maintained significantly lower prices than in England and Wales.[8]

Access edit

Access to improved water supply and sanitation in the UK is universal. In 2015, 100% of the population had access to improved water supply and 99% of the population had access to "improved" sanitation.[9][1]

Urban (90% of the population) Rural (10% of the population) Total
Water Broad definition 100% 100% 100%
House connections 100% 98% 100%
Sanitation Sewerage 97% 97% 97%

Source: WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Program (2008) [10]

Water sources edit

According to the Environment Agency, total water abstraction for public water supply in the UK was 16,406 megalitres per day in 2007.[11] Groundwater contributes 30 per cent of public supply water in England. In Wales and Scotland groundwater provides about five per cent of public supply.[12] The majority of the UK's abstraction of surface water is from reservoirs, where rainwater is transported via rivers and streams and contained in an artificial or natural lake until it is required.[13]

Water regulation edit

Water is a universal human right,[14] and basic to survival.[15] While the UK has the fortune of substantial rainfall, climate damage means water resources are under pressure, and less predictable than before.[16]

Scotland and Northern Ireland edit

 
Loch Faskally is one of many reservoirs used by publicly owned Scottish Water. Its prices are around 10% lower than privatised English and Welsh water companies.[17]

The publicly owned Scottish Water is appointed by Scottish ministers,[18] and overseen by the Water Industry Commission for Scotland,[19] although it has no direct voting power for customers.[20]

In Scotland, it was thought that competition in sewer and water services could pose a public health risk.[21]

In Northern Ireland water and sewerage services are also provided by a single public entity, Northern Ireland Water.

England edit

 
Under EU water law drinking water, bathing waters, and the general environment, like at the River Wandle, must be kept clean and improved.

In England there are 10 private regional water and sewerage companies and 13 mostly smaller private "water only" companies. Each company board is typically accountable to shareholders, mostly asset managers, under the Companies Act 2006. While both UK and EU law is clear that water companies, even if privatised, still are public bodies,[22] these companies pursue shareholder profit, only restricted by regulation.

Ofwat (technically called the Water Services Regulation Authority) has at least three members appointed the Secretary of State,[23] and is meant to "protect the interests of consumers, wherever appropriate by promoting effective competition" and yet ensure companies have a "reasonable returns on their capital",[24] rather than simply act in the public interest.[25] Ofwat licences companies (known as water "undertakers") to operate water and sewer services with "instruments of appointment", and can impose various conditions.[26] Licences usually last 25 years but can be terminated on 10 years notice by government. Because of public outcry over rising prices,[27] the government tried to construct more competition, with the Water Act 2014 requiring suppliers can access or pump water through other providers' pipes, for a reasonable cost, so that consumers might choose their company.[28]

As real competition in natural monopolies always appeared unlikely, Ofwat has always set upper limits to prices, historically for 5-year periods.[29] This has followed the formula of RPI – X + K, where prices should rise no more than the retail price index of inflation, reduced by efficiency savings (X), but allowing for capital investment (K). This means prices could be fixed down or go up. Companies must publicise an annual charging scheme approved by Ofwat,[30] while Ofwat must openly report its work programme, report to the Secretary of State, keep a register of appointments and make information on costs available.[31] Companies can appeal to the Competition and Markets Authority for disputes over access and price caps, while Ofwat can refer companies to the CMA for breaches of conditions.[32] After unacceptable experience of people being disconnected by private companies for non-payment,[33] new regulations introduced exemptions for vulnerable customers, particularly people who are unable to pay, have large families or have medical conditions.[34] Everyone has the right to be connect to a water supply and to sewers, but the cost of new connections is borne by the customer.[35] UK water quality is generally high, since large new investments were made following the EU Drinking Water Quality Directive 1998, requiring water is "wholesome and clean".[36] Ofwat is required to issue enforcement orders under the Water Industry Act 1991 section 18 to uphold drinking quality standards, rather than being content with "undertakings" from water companies.[37]

The Drinking Water Inspectorate has powers of investigation.[38] There are further standards for water companies to keep up water pressure in pipes, respond quickly to letters, phone calls and keep appointments, restore supply and provide water in emergencies, and stop sewer flooding or compensate up to £1000.[39] Finally, the Consumer Council for Water is meant to hear complaints and publicise issues with Ofwat and water companies, but its members are not elected by water customers and it has no legal power to bind Ofwat or the companies.[40]

Environmental harm edit

 
An 1828 cartoon of a woman dropping her teacup when she sees Thames Water magnified.[41] After the Great Stink of 1858, the London sewerage system was built under Joseph Bazalgette.

The law has frequently failed to ensure businesses are fully responsible for water pollution. In principle, a water authority used to be strictly liable for damage it caused.[42] However, more recently water company liability particularly for sewerage leaks has not appeared to as a sufficient deterrent. In R v Anglian Water Services Ltd the Court of Appeal held that fines for pollution should always be set to ensure sufficient deterrence, but on the facts reduced a fine from £200,000 to £60,000.[43] In Marcic v Thames Water plc the House of Lords held that Thames Water plc was not liable in nuisance, or for breach of a homeowner's right to property, as sewerage repeatedly overflowed residents' gardens.[44] According to Lord Hoffmann, the owners had to use statutory mechanisms to secure accountability rather than suing in tort. More recently in Manchester Ship Canal Co Ltd v United Utilities Water Plc the Supreme Court held that United Utilities was responsible for trespass and pollution of canalways, but only before 1991 when statutory reform provided immunity.[45] By contrast, in Cambridge Water Co Ltd v Eastern Counties Leather plc, the House of Lords held that a tanner business was not liable for polluting the Cambridge Water supply with toxic chemicals, because it said the loss was not "reasonably foreseeable" and therefore too remote.[46] These cases sit uneasily with the principle that polluters should pay, and the scheme of the Water Framework Directive 2000 to ensure proper enforcement of clean water standards.[47]

The Environment Agency is responsible for environmental regulation, and the Drinking Water Inspectorate for regulating drinking water quality. The economic water industry regulator in Scotland is the Water Industry Commission for Scotland and the environmental regulator is the Scottish Environment Protection Agency.

Ownership edit

A 2022 study, found that over 70% of the English water industry is in foreign hands (foreign ownership).[48][49][50]

Employment edit

Total employment by UK water companies amounted to 41,000 full-time equivalent jobs in 2012/13, according to an analysis by the consulting firm Deloitte. In addition, 86,000 jobs were supported indirectly.[51]

Financial aspects edit

Tariffs edit

According to a 2006 survey by NUS consulting the average water tariff (price) without sewerage in the U.K. for large consumers was the equivalent of US$1.90 per cubic metre. This was the third-highest tariff among the 14 mostly OECD countries covered by the report.[52]

Metering edit

A particularity of water tariffs in the U.K. is the low share of metering. Most users are not billed on a volumetric basis and have no financial incentive for water conservation. Since the 1990s efforts have been made to increase the share of household metering, which reached 33% in 2008.[2] The Environment Agency would like to see 75% of households metered by 2025. The Fairness on Tap coalition (including National Trust, Waterwise, WWF and RSPB) is calling for the government to set out a strategy to install water meters in at least 80% of England where there is the greatest pressure on the freshwater environment and people's pockets, by 2020. Studies show that water meters lead to a 5–15% reduction in household water use.[53]

UK wide Fibre in Water edit

In 2021, the UK Government Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport launched an open competition called 'Fibre in Water' to explore the potential for delivering broadband and mobile phone services via drinking water mains.[54]

Environmental criticisms edit

In July 2011, the think tank Policy Exchange reported a significant decline in river quality due to abstraction carried out by water companies. The report calls for water companies to be charged more for using the most environmentally vulnerable rivers and aquifers in drier parts of the country, with cheaper rates where water is more abundant. It also called for higher water charges during droughts.[55]

In 2009, an investigation conducted by the BBC's Panorama concluded that the operation of more than 20,000 Combined Sewer Overflow pipes (CSO) was leading to the routine spillage of untreated wastes around Britain's coastline, potentially leading to very dirty water around some of the most popular beaches in the UK. The CSOs, intended for use in very rare occasions, were not covered by the existing legislation for waste emissions.[56]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c WHO/UNICEF (2015) Progress on sanitation and drinking water – 2015 update and MDG assessment, Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation
  2. ^ a b "Water UK".
  3. ^ BBC:How much does your water company leak?, 5 April 2012, retrieved on July 24, 2012
  4. ^ J Getzler, A History of Water Rights at Common Law (2004) 328–352
  5. ^ E Porter, Water Management in England and Wales (1978) 29
  6. ^ e.g. Water (Scotland) Act 1980 (c 45)
  7. ^ Water Act 1989 ss 4, 83–85 were the initial privatisation provisions. See C Harlow and R Rawlings, Law and Administration (3rd edn 2009) ch 7, 293–295.
  8. ^ e.g. 'Water costs cheaper in Scotland' (19 February 2009) BBC
  9. ^ "WASHwatch.org – United Kingdom". washwatch.org. Retrieved 2017-03-22.
  10. ^ "WHO/UNICEF JMP".
  11. ^ "Environment Agency".
  12. ^ "Groundwater Resources in the UK".
  13. ^ "Water UK".
  14. ^ UDHR 1948 art 25(1) and ICESCR 1966 art 11(1), which is ratified by the UK, both expressly protect the right to food, in which water is implicit. This was acknowledged by the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (2002) General Comment No 15.
  15. ^ E McGaughey, Principles of Enterprise Law: the Economic Constitution and Human Rights (Cambridge UP 2022) ch 13, 'Food, forests and water'
  16. ^ S Hendry, Frameworks for Water Law Reform (2014) ch 5, 86 and C Harlow and R Rawlings, Law and Administration (3rd edn 2009) ch 7, 292–304
  17. ^ See 'Water costs cheaper in Scotland' (19 February 2009) BBC. D Hall, E Lobina and P Terhorst, 'Re-municipalisation in the early twenty-first century: water in France and energy in Germany' (2013) 27(2) International Review of Applied Economics 193 and J Meek, 'Not a drop to drink' in Private Island: Why Britain Belongs to Someone Else (2014) ch 3
  18. ^ Water Industry (Scotland) Act 2002, constitutes Scottish Water. Sch 3 requires an 8–13 member board appointed by the Scottish Ministers as experts. The Water (Scotland) Act 1980, contains duties and functions. The Sewerage (Scotland) Act 1968 deals with sewage.
  19. ^ Water Industry (Scotland) Act 2002 s 1
  20. ^ There is, however, a "Customer Forum" without any binding rights, but which may have some useful input: see S Hendry, Frameworks for Water Law Reform (2014) ch 5, 95, fn 282
  21. ^ S Hendry, Frameworks for Water Law Reform (2014) ch 5, 81
  22. ^ See Griffin v South West Water Services [1995] IRLR 15 and Fish Legal v Information Commissioner, United Utilities, Yorkshire Water and Southern Water (2014) C-279/12
  23. ^ Water Industry Act 1991 s 1A and Sch 1A, para 1. This was amended by the Water Act 2003
  24. ^ Water Industry Act 1991 s 2
  25. ^ cf Water Industry (Scotland) Act 2002 s 1, requiring "promoting the interests of customers".
  26. ^ WIA 1991 s 11. The Water Act 2003 s 52 gives Ofwat a duty to cooperate with the Secretary of State, the National Assembly for Wales, the Environment Agency, and the Natural Resources Body for Wales.
  27. ^ e.g. R Graham, 'Water in the UK – public versus private' (19 December 2014) openDemocracy
  28. ^ WIA 1991 ss 66A-L. Slightly different, WIA 1991 ss 105A-C enables transfer of lateral drains and private sewers to water companies where they were draining to a public mains sewer and treatment works, to avoid deterioration. Water Industry (Schemes for Adoption of Private Sewers) Regulations SI 2011/1566.
  29. ^ WIA 1991 ss 11–12, price determinations and conditions set in Instruments of Appointment, Condition B, each 5 years.
  30. ^ WIA 1991 ss 142–150
  31. ^ WIA 1991 ss 192A-B, 201–202
  32. ^ Ofwat and the CMA also have jurisdiction for mergers for companies with a size over £10m p/a: WIA 1991 ss 31–35.
  33. ^ See R (Oldham MBC) v Director General of Water Services (1998) 31 HLR 224 finding automatic disconnection from water through a prepayment meter did not comply with the law. R (Lancashire CC) v Director of Water Services [1999] EnvLR 114, stopped disconnections or limiting devices. The Water Industry Act 1999 stopped arbitrary disconnections.
  34. ^ Water Industry (Charges) (Vulnerable Groups) Regulations SI 1999/3441 and Floods and Water Act 2010 s 44. This does not mean that company profits' are reduced by vulnerable customers, as companies can raise prices for other customers to ensure their profits are not reduced.
  35. ^ WIA 1991 ss 37, 45 (water) and 94–99 (sewers).
  36. ^ Drinking Water Quality Directive 98/83/EC art 4, meaning water is free from any micro-organisms and parasites dangerous to health, and complies with chemical and biological standards listed in Annex I. This is implemented by the Water Supply (Water Quality) Regulations 1989 SI 1989/1147. In McColl v Strathclyde RC 1983 SC 225 water fluoridation was successfully challenged.
  37. ^ Commission v United Kingdom (1992) C-337/89, on the failure to transpose the Directive. The UK system under WIA 1991 s 19 of accepting undertakings from water companies (instead of s 18 enforcement orders) was not an adequate legal framework to comply with EU law. Contrast Commission v Spain (2003) C-278/01, ECLI:EU:C:2003:635 on bathing water quality, where the CJEU confirmed fines of a €624,150 per year and per 1% of bathing areas in Spanish inshore waters which were found not to conform to the Bathing Waters Directive 2006/7/EC.
  38. ^ WIA 1991 s 86
  39. ^ Water Supply and Sewerage Services (Customer Service Standards) Regulations 2008 (SI 2008/594) regs 6–12
  40. ^ cf WIA 1991 ss 27A-27K
  41. ^ By William Heath at the time of the Commission on the London Water Supply report, 1828
  42. ^ Department of Transport v North West Water Authority [1984] AC 336
  43. ^ [2003] EWCA Crim 2243
  44. ^ [2003] UKHL 66
  45. ^ [2014] UKSC 40
  46. ^ [1994] 2 AC 264
  47. ^ Water Framework Directive 2000/60/EC recital 53, and see E Fisher, B Lange and E Scotford, Environmental Law Text, Cases, and Materials (2013) ch 14
  48. ^ "Revealed: more than 70% of English water industry is in foreign ownership". The Guardian. 2022-11-30. Retrieved 2022-12-06.
  49. ^ S Hendry, Frameworks for Water Law Reform (2014) ch 5, 78, quoting P Marin, Public private partnerships for urban water utilities: A review of experiences in developing countries (2009) finding 7% of companies were privatised, and suggesting even if this is too low, 15% would be a "generous estimate".
  50. ^ D Hall, E Lobina and P Terhorst, 'Re-municipalisation in the early twenty-first century: water in France and energy in Germany' (2013) 27(2) International Review of Applied Economics 193 and J Meek, 'Not a drop to drink' in Private Island: Why Britain Belongs to Someone Else (2014) ch 3
  51. ^ "Tapping into growth: economic impact report". Water UK. June 2014. Retrieved 1 September 2014.
  52. ^ "NUS Consulting" (PDF).
  53. ^ "2010 to 2015 government policy: water and sewerage services". GOV.UK.
  54. ^ "Fibre in Water: Improving access to advanced broadband and mobile services via drinking water mains". DCMS. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
  55. ^ Britain's rivers 'being ruined by demands of water companies', The Independent, 3 July 2011
  56. ^ BBC News: Britain's Dirty Beaches, 7 September 2009

References edit

  • E McGaughey, Principles of Enterprise Law: the Economic Constitution and Human Rights (Cambridge UP 2022) ch 13

External links edit

  • Water UK
  • Environment Agency 's water quality website
  • Water Resources Management in Cooperation with Agriculture project

water, supply, sanitation, united, kingdom, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, april, 2022, public, water, supply, sanitation, unite. This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article April 2022 Public water supply and sanitation in the United Kingdom is characterised by universal access and generally good service quality A salient feature of the sector in the United Kingdom compared to other developed countries is the diversity of institutional arrangements between the constituting parts of the UK England and Wales Scotland and Northern Ireland which are each described in separate articles while this article is devoted to some common issues across the United Kingdom United Kingdom Water and Sanitation Data Access to an improved water source 100 2015 1 Access to improved sanitation 99 2015 1 Continuity of supply 100 Average urban water use l c d 150 Average urban domestic water and sewer bill for 20m3 n a Share of household metering 33 2008 2 Non revenue water 20 2010 2011 3 Share of collected wastewater treated 100 Annual investment in WSS n a Share of self financing by utilities n a Share of tax financing n a Share of external financing n a Institutions Decentralization to municipalities No National water and sanitation company None Water and sanitation regulator Three regulators one each for England Wales Scotland and Northern Ireland Responsibility for policy setting Sector law None Number of service providers 28 Contents 1 History 2 Access 3 Water sources 4 Water regulation 4 1 Scotland and Northern Ireland 4 2 England 4 3 Environmental harm 4 4 Ownership 5 Employment 6 Financial aspects 6 1 Tariffs 7 Metering 8 UK wide Fibre in Water 9 Environmental criticisms 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksHistory editHistorically water for drinking general use or sewerage was largely left to private arrangements 4 The recurrence of water poisoning and large public health crises were a part of people s ordinary existence until scientific advances of the 19th century After the Broad Street cholera outbreak of 1854 John Snow first identified the cause of cholera as drinking water being polluted by excrement Following the Great Stink of 1858 where the River Thames had become so bad smelling that it offended the Queen and forced Parliament to relocate Joseph Bazalgette began to build the London sewerage system Starting with the Public Health Act 1848 11 amp 12 Vict c 63 and its creation of a local board of health in each council and the Public Health Act 1866 local government built drains sewers and began piping clean water to households The Waterworks Clauses Act 1847 and the Waterworks Clauses Act 1863 provided model constitutions for the dozens of spreading private and local government water companies The Public Health Act 1875 38 amp 39 Vict c 55 required all new houses to have running water and internal drainage By 1944 there were over 1000 water suppliers in England and Wales though 26 supplied half and 97 a further quarter of total volume 5 The Water Act 1945 organised a national water supply policy before the Water Act 1973 finally organised ten regional water authorities for England and Wales and additional authorities in Scotland and Northern Ireland 6 However following other privatisations the Water Act 1989 changed the ten authorities into ten private water companies each with a local monopoly subject to price caps of a new regulator known as Ofwat 7 Scottish Water after a public campaign remained publicly owned and as a result has maintained significantly lower prices than in England and Wales 8 Access editAccess to improved water supply and sanitation in the UK is universal In 2015 100 of the population had access to improved water supply and 99 of the population had access to improved sanitation 9 1 Urban 90 of the population Rural 10 of the population Total Water Broad definition 100 100 100 House connections 100 98 100 Sanitation Sewerage 97 97 97 Source WHO UNICEF Joint Monitoring Program 2008 10 Water sources editAccording to the Environment Agency total water abstraction for public water supply in the UK was 16 406 megalitres per day in 2007 11 Groundwater contributes 30 per cent of public supply water in England In Wales and Scotland groundwater provides about five per cent of public supply 12 The majority of the UK s abstraction of surface water is from reservoirs where rainwater is transported via rivers and streams and contained in an artificial or natural lake until it is required 13 Water regulation editSee also Water supply and sanitation in the European Union EU water policy and London water supply infrastructure Water is a universal human right 14 and basic to survival 15 While the UK has the fortune of substantial rainfall climate damage means water resources are under pressure and less predictable than before 16 Scotland and Northern Ireland edit Main article Scottish Water nbsp Loch Faskally is one of many reservoirs used by publicly owned Scottish Water Its prices are around 10 lower than privatised English and Welsh water companies 17 The publicly owned Scottish Water is appointed by Scottish ministers 18 and overseen by the Water Industry Commission for Scotland 19 although it has no direct voting power for customers 20 In Scotland it was thought that competition in sewer and water services could pose a public health risk 21 In Northern Ireland water and sewerage services are also provided by a single public entity Northern Ireland Water England edit See also UK water companies Thames Water and United Kingdom water companies nbsp Under EU water law drinking water bathing waters and the general environment like at the River Wandle must be kept clean and improved In England there are 10 private regional water and sewerage companies and 13 mostly smaller private water only companies Each company board is typically accountable to shareholders mostly asset managers under the Companies Act 2006 While both UK and EU law is clear that water companies even if privatised still are public bodies 22 these companies pursue shareholder profit only restricted by regulation Ofwat technically called the Water Services Regulation Authority has at least three members appointed the Secretary of State 23 and is meant to protect the interests of consumers wherever appropriate by promoting effective competition and yet ensure companies have a reasonable returns on their capital 24 rather than simply act in the public interest 25 Ofwat licences companies known as water undertakers to operate water and sewer services with instruments of appointment and can impose various conditions 26 Licences usually last 25 years but can be terminated on 10 years notice by government Because of public outcry over rising prices 27 the government tried to construct more competition with the Water Act 2014 requiring suppliers can access or pump water through other providers pipes for a reasonable cost so that consumers might choose their company 28 As real competition in natural monopolies always appeared unlikely Ofwat has always set upper limits to prices historically for 5 year periods 29 This has followed the formula of RPI X K where prices should rise no more than the retail price index of inflation reduced by efficiency savings X but allowing for capital investment K This means prices could be fixed down or go up Companies must publicise an annual charging scheme approved by Ofwat 30 while Ofwat must openly report its work programme report to the Secretary of State keep a register of appointments and make information on costs available 31 Companies can appeal to the Competition and Markets Authority for disputes over access and price caps while Ofwat can refer companies to the CMA for breaches of conditions 32 After unacceptable experience of people being disconnected by private companies for non payment 33 new regulations introduced exemptions for vulnerable customers particularly people who are unable to pay have large families or have medical conditions 34 Everyone has the right to be connect to a water supply and to sewers but the cost of new connections is borne by the customer 35 UK water quality is generally high since large new investments were made following the EU Drinking Water Quality Directive 1998 requiring water is wholesome and clean 36 Ofwat is required to issue enforcement orders under the Water Industry Act 1991 section 18 to uphold drinking quality standards rather than being content with undertakings from water companies 37 The Drinking Water Inspectorate has powers of investigation 38 There are further standards for water companies to keep up water pressure in pipes respond quickly to letters phone calls and keep appointments restore supply and provide water in emergencies and stop sewer flooding or compensate up to 1000 39 Finally the Consumer Council for Water is meant to hear complaints and publicise issues with Ofwat and water companies but its members are not elected by water customers and it has no legal power to bind Ofwat or the companies 40 Environmental harm edit nbsp An 1828 cartoon of a woman dropping her teacup when she sees Thames Water magnified 41 After the Great Stink of 1858 the London sewerage system was built under Joseph Bazalgette The law has frequently failed to ensure businesses are fully responsible for water pollution In principle a water authority used to be strictly liable for damage it caused 42 However more recently water company liability particularly for sewerage leaks has not appeared to as a sufficient deterrent In R v Anglian Water Services Ltd the Court of Appeal held that fines for pollution should always be set to ensure sufficient deterrence but on the facts reduced a fine from 200 000 to 60 000 43 In Marcic v Thames Water plc the House of Lords held that Thames Water plc was not liable in nuisance or for breach of a homeowner s right to property as sewerage repeatedly overflowed residents gardens 44 According to Lord Hoffmann the owners had to use statutory mechanisms to secure accountability rather than suing in tort More recently in Manchester Ship Canal Co Ltd v United Utilities Water Plc the Supreme Court held that United Utilities was responsible for trespass and pollution of canalways but only before 1991 when statutory reform provided immunity 45 By contrast in Cambridge Water Co Ltd v Eastern Counties Leather plc the House of Lords held that a tanner business was not liable for polluting the Cambridge Water supply with toxic chemicals because it said the loss was not reasonably foreseeable and therefore too remote 46 These cases sit uneasily with the principle that polluters should pay and the scheme of the Water Framework Directive 2000 to ensure proper enforcement of clean water standards 47 The Environment Agency is responsible for environmental regulation and the Drinking Water Inspectorate for regulating drinking water quality The economic water industry regulator in Scotland is the Water Industry Commission for Scotland and the environmental regulator is the Scottish Environment Protection Agency Ownership edit A 2022 study found that over 70 of the English water industry is in foreign hands foreign ownership 48 49 50 Employment editTotal employment by UK water companies amounted to 41 000 full time equivalent jobs in 2012 13 according to an analysis by the consulting firm Deloitte In addition 86 000 jobs were supported indirectly 51 Financial aspects editTariffs edit According to a 2006 survey by NUS consulting the average water tariff price without sewerage in the U K for large consumers was the equivalent of US 1 90 per cubic metre This was the third highest tariff among the 14 mostly OECD countries covered by the report 52 Metering editA particularity of water tariffs in the U K is the low share of metering Most users are not billed on a volumetric basis and have no financial incentive for water conservation Since the 1990s efforts have been made to increase the share of household metering which reached 33 in 2008 2 The Environment Agency would like to see 75 of households metered by 2025 The Fairness on Tap coalition including National Trust Waterwise WWF and RSPB is calling for the government to set out a strategy to install water meters in at least 80 of England where there is the greatest pressure on the freshwater environment and people s pockets by 2020 Studies show that water meters lead to a 5 15 reduction in household water use 53 UK wide Fibre in Water editIn 2021 the UK Government Department for Digital Culture Media amp Sport launched an open competition called Fibre in Water to explore the potential for delivering broadband and mobile phone services via drinking water mains 54 Environmental criticisms editIn July 2011 the think tank Policy Exchange reported a significant decline in river quality due to abstraction carried out by water companies The report calls for water companies to be charged more for using the most environmentally vulnerable rivers and aquifers in drier parts of the country with cheaper rates where water is more abundant It also called for higher water charges during droughts 55 In 2009 an investigation conducted by the BBC s Panorama concluded that the operation of more than 20 000 Combined Sewer Overflow pipes CSO was leading to the routine spillage of untreated wastes around Britain s coastline potentially leading to very dirty water around some of the most popular beaches in the UK The CSOs intended for use in very rare occasions were not covered by the existing legislation for waste emissions 56 See also editUK enterprise law EU water policy Water Framework Directive Water supply and sanitation in England Water supply and sanitation in Northern Ireland Water supply and sanitation in Scotland Water supply and sanitation in Wales Water supply and sanitation in GibraltarNotes edit a b c WHO UNICEF 2015 Progress on sanitation and drinking water 2015 update and MDG assessment Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation a b Water UK BBC How much does your water company leak 5 April 2012 retrieved on July 24 2012 J Getzler A History of Water Rights at Common Law 2004 328 352 E Porter Water Management in England and Wales 1978 29 e g Water Scotland Act 1980 c 45 Water Act 1989 ss 4 83 85 were the initial privatisation provisions See C Harlow and R Rawlings Law and Administration 3rd edn 2009 ch 7 293 295 e g Water costs cheaper in Scotland 19 February 2009 BBC WASHwatch org United Kingdom washwatch org Retrieved 2017 03 22 WHO UNICEF JMP Environment Agency Groundwater Resources in the UK Water UK UDHR 1948 art 25 1 and ICESCR 1966 art 11 1 which is ratified by the UK both expressly protect the right to food in which water is implicit This was acknowledged by the UN Committee on Economic Social and Cultural Rights 2002 General Comment No 15 E McGaughey Principles of Enterprise Law the Economic Constitution and Human Rights Cambridge UP 2022 ch 13 Food forests and water S Hendry Frameworks for Water Law Reform 2014 ch 5 86 and C Harlow and R Rawlings Law and Administration 3rd edn 2009 ch 7 292 304 See Water costs cheaper in Scotland 19 February 2009 BBC D Hall E Lobina and P Terhorst Re municipalisation in the early twenty first century water in France and energy in Germany 2013 27 2 International Review of Applied Economics 193 and J Meek Not a drop to drink in Private Island Why Britain Belongs to Someone Else 2014 ch 3 Water Industry Scotland Act 2002 constitutes Scottish Water Sch 3 requires an 8 13 member board appointed by the Scottish Ministers as experts The Water Scotland Act 1980 contains duties and functions The Sewerage Scotland Act 1968 deals with sewage Water Industry Scotland Act 2002 s 1 There is however a Customer Forum without any binding rights but which may have some useful input see S Hendry Frameworks for Water Law Reform 2014 ch 5 95 fn 282 S Hendry Frameworks for Water Law Reform 2014 ch 5 81 See Griffin v South West Water Services 1995 IRLR 15 and Fish Legal v Information Commissioner United Utilities Yorkshire Water and Southern Water 2014 C 279 12 Water Industry Act 1991 s 1A and Sch 1A para 1 This was amended by the Water Act 2003 Water Industry Act 1991 s 2 cf Water Industry Scotland Act 2002 s 1 requiring promoting the interests of customers WIA 1991 s 11 The Water Act 2003 s 52 gives Ofwat a duty to cooperate with the Secretary of State the National Assembly for Wales the Environment Agency and the Natural Resources Body for Wales e g R Graham Water in the UK public versus private 19 December 2014 openDemocracy WIA 1991 ss 66A L Slightly different WIA 1991 ss 105A C enables transfer of lateral drains and private sewers to water companies where they were draining to a public mains sewer and treatment works to avoid deterioration Water Industry Schemes for Adoption of Private Sewers Regulations SI 2011 1566 WIA 1991 ss 11 12 price determinations and conditions set in Instruments of Appointment Condition B each 5 years WIA 1991 ss 142 150 WIA 1991 ss 192A B 201 202 Ofwat and the CMA also have jurisdiction for mergers for companies with a size over 10m p a WIA 1991 ss 31 35 See R Oldham MBC v Director General of Water Services 1998 31 HLR 224 finding automatic disconnection from water through a prepayment meter did not comply with the law R Lancashire CC v Director of Water Services 1999 EnvLR 114 stopped disconnections or limiting devices The Water Industry Act 1999 stopped arbitrary disconnections Water Industry Charges Vulnerable Groups Regulations SI 1999 3441 and Floods and Water Act 2010 s 44 This does not mean that company profits are reduced by vulnerable customers as companies can raise prices for other customers to ensure their profits are not reduced WIA 1991 ss 37 45 water and 94 99 sewers Drinking Water Quality Directive 98 83 EC art 4 meaning water is free from any micro organisms and parasites dangerous to health and complies with chemical and biological standards listed in Annex I This is implemented by the Water Supply Water Quality Regulations 1989 SI 1989 1147 In McColl v Strathclyde RC 1983 SC 225 water fluoridation was successfully challenged Commission v United Kingdom 1992 C 337 89 on the failure to transpose the Directive The UK system under WIA 1991 s 19 of accepting undertakings from water companies instead of s 18 enforcement orders was not an adequate legal framework to comply with EU law Contrast Commission v Spain 2003 C 278 01 ECLI EU C 2003 635 on bathing water quality where the CJEU confirmed fines of a 624 150 per year and per 1 of bathing areas in Spanish inshore waters which were found not to conform to the Bathing Waters Directive 2006 7 EC WIA 1991 s 86 Water Supply and Sewerage Services Customer Service Standards Regulations 2008 SI 2008 594 regs 6 12 cf WIA 1991 ss 27A 27K By William Heath at the time of the Commission on the London Water Supply report 1828 Department of Transport v North West Water Authority 1984 AC 336 2003 EWCA Crim 2243 2003 UKHL 66 2014 UKSC 40 1994 2 AC 264 Water Framework Directive 2000 60 EC recital 53 and see E Fisher B Lange and E Scotford Environmental Law Text Cases and Materials 2013 ch 14 Revealed more than 70 of English water industry is in foreign ownership The Guardian 2022 11 30 Retrieved 2022 12 06 S Hendry Frameworks for Water Law Reform 2014 ch 5 78 quoting P Marin Public private partnerships for urban water utilities A review of experiences in developing countries 2009 finding 7 of companies were privatised and suggesting even if this is too low 15 would be a generous estimate D Hall E Lobina and P Terhorst Re municipalisation in the early twenty first century water in France and energy in Germany 2013 27 2 International Review of Applied Economics 193 and J Meek Not a drop to drink in Private Island Why Britain Belongs to Someone Else 2014 ch 3 Tapping into growth economic impact report Water UK June 2014 Retrieved 1 September 2014 NUS Consulting PDF 2010 to 2015 government policy water and sewerage services GOV UK Fibre in Water Improving access to advanced broadband and mobile services via drinking water mains DCMS Retrieved 16 August 2021 Britain s rivers being ruined by demands of water companies The Independent 3 July 2011 BBC News Britain s Dirty Beaches 7 September 2009References editE McGaughey Principles of Enterprise Law the Economic Constitution and Human Rights Cambridge UP 2022 ch 13External links editWater UK Environment Agency s water quality website Water Resources Management in Cooperation with Agriculture project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Water supply and sanitation in the United Kingdom amp oldid 1217146491, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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