Water industry review will NOT look at privatisation failures

  • Post last modified:October 23, 2024
  • Reading time:9 mins read


The Labour Party government has announced a review of the water industry and its regulation. Whilst it states it is the ‘largest review of sector since privatisation’ – the review is not even going to look at privatisation. Something smells suspicious – and it’s not just the raw sewage spilling into the sea.

Water industry stinks to high heaven

According to the governments own website, the commission will form the next stage of their long-term approach in:

ensuring we have a sufficiently robust and stable regulatory framework to attract the investment needed to clean up our waterways, speed up infrastructure delivery and restore public confidence in the sector.

However, as many people on X pointed out, the government could solve all of these problems by bringing water back into public ownership:

Water privatisation isn’t working

Since the government privatised the water industry in 1989, conditions have plummeted while prices have skyrocketed. Yet still, Labour refuse to tackle the actual problem – that is, privatisation itself:

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) could take a similar stance to Wales. Water companies are run as not-for-profits, however companies are still be allowed to award outrageous bonuses.

Private firms in their back pockets

Meanwhile, Good Morning Britain (yes, GMB!) were grilling environment secretary Steve Reed over something that reeks. It was Reed himself – or more precisely – him accepting freebies from the parent company of a water firm. Why he wouldn’t be looking at that same company’s handling of UK sewage and water infrastructure is a mystery not even Scooby Doo could solve:

It should be what the people want, not what the private firms with a revolving door to parliament want, but that’s not how it’s going under sewage-monger Starmer:

There is talk of The Water Services Regulation Authority (Ofwat) being scrapped altogether. However, the announcement of the commission is failing to grasp the basics. Private water companies are to blame. As is any government who continues to allow them to get away with ripping the country off, while simultaneously poisoning our waterworks:

As usual, Keir Starmer’s government are skirting around the real issue. This should flush away any lingering notion the Labour government is in it for anything other than its own interests.

Feature image via the Canary





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