kıbrıs ingiltere londra lefkoşa
DOLAR
34,5136
EURO
36,1545
STERLIN
43,4711
BITCOIN
$98.835
Adana Adıyaman Afyon Ağrı Aksaray Amasya Ankara Antalya Ardahan Artvin Aydın Balıkesir Bartın Batman Bayburt Bilecik Bingöl Bitlis Bolu Burdur Bursa Çanakkale Çankırı Çorum Denizli Diyarbakır Düzce Edirne Elazığ Erzincan Erzurum Eskişehir Gaziantep Giresun Gümüşhane Hakkari Hatay Iğdır Isparta İstanbul İzmir K.Maraş Karabük Karaman Kars Kastamonu Kayseri Kırıkkale Kırklareli Kırşehir Kilis Kocaeli Konya Kütahya Malatya Manisa Mardin Mersin Muğla Muş Nevşehir Niğde Ordu Osmaniye Rize Sakarya Samsun Siirt Sinop Sivas Şanlıurfa Şırnak Tekirdağ Tokat Trabzon Tunceli Uşak Van Yalova Yozgat Zonguldak
LONDRA
Parçalı bulutlu
13°C
LONDRA
13°C
Parçalı bulutlu
Cumartesi Hafif yağmur
15°C
Pazar Kapalı
="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 300 300" enable-background="new 0 0 300 300">
12°C
Pazartesi Orta şiddetli yağmur
="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 300 300" enable-background="new 0 0 300 300">
12°C
Salı kapalı
="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 300 300" enable-background="new 0 0 300 300">
12°C

Water customers may be owed £163m for sewage spills

Water customers may be owed £163m for sewage spills
21.11.2022
0
A+
A-

WATER customers in England and Wales may be owed £163m for sewage spills, corporate wrongdoing researchers claim.

Water firms charge customers to treat sewage, but instead have been widely discharging it into rivers and onto beaches, researchers from Fideres said.

The firms have not invested enough, leading to an “excessively low quality service”, the researchers said.

However, a water industry body said firms were putting in place a £56bn programme to tackle spills.

Water firms have been under pressure to clean up their act after discharging sewage in to rivers and the sea 400,000 times in 2020.

The water industry in England and Wales is currently under criminal investigation by regulators Ofwat and the Environment Agency over sewage discharges, and it has opened six enforcement cases against companies.

However, the Fideres researchers called for further action over competition concerns, as first reported by the Guardian.

Chris Pike, one of the researchers, said that the firms “face no competitive pressure”, which has led to underinvestment.

He pointed to recent research by the Financial Times, which found that water firms had “slashed” investment in critical infrastructure by up to a fifth since they were privatised 30 years ago.

Over the same period, the firms borrowed £53bn, but much of that has been used to pay £72bn in dividends to shareholders, not for new investment.

A certain amount of people’s water bills is supposed to go towards cleaning wastewater.

But due to the spills, “there is a reasonable case to be made under competition law that users may have been overcharged by approximately £163m over the last six years”, the researchers said.

Yorumlar

Henüz yorum yapılmamış. İlk yorumu yukarıdaki form aracılığıyla siz yapabilirsiniz.