Thames Water could delay accounts as turmoil in
water industry grows
Firm refuses to say when it will publish annual
report; pressure builds on regulator Ofwat
Anna Isaac
and Sandra Laville
Thu 29 Jun
2023 19.26 BST
Thames
Water has refused to say when it will publish its annual report and accounts,
which had been expected by investors next week, as concerns mount over the
company’s financial viability.
The risk of
delay will add to the turmoil engulfing England’s 11 privatised water
companies, after a day in which board directors, ministers and regulators
scrambled to restore calm as discussions continued over a potential temporary
nationalisation of Thames Water.
The
Guardian revealed on Wednesday that England’s largest water company, which
serves 15 million customers in an area than spans the Thames Valley from London
to Oxford and beyond, may have to spend £10bn improving its pipes and treatment
works to meet the legal minimums required by regulators.
However,
the company is refusing to say publicly whether the accounts will appear next
week, or even before the regulator’s deadline. Sources familiar with the
emergency talks are raising questions about whether the financial issues could
cause its auditor, PwC, to delay signing off the accounts. PwC has declined to
comment.
Ofwat tried
to restore calm on Thursday. Releasing a “statement on financial resilience in
the water sector”, it said Thames Water had “significant issues to address” but
that the company had “strong liquidity”, having recently received an additional
£500m from shareholders, and it now had £4.4bn in cash and committed funding.
Downing
Street said the prime minister had “full confidence” in Ofwat and its ability
to monitor the situation, and that the regulator was “focused on doing their
job to keep companies’ financial resilience under close scrutiny”. The health
minister Neil O’Brien sought to reassure Thames customers, telling the BBC:
“Absolutely nothing is going to happen in terms of either their bills or their
access to water.”
Meanwhile,
the EA revealed it was stepping up an investigation into illegal sewage
dumping, with the agency’s teams uncovering what they say is potentially
widespread non-compliance with rules on sewage treatment across 10 water
companies.
The EA
investigation, launched in November 2021, is running parallel to an
investigation by Ofwat into the financial impacts on companies of failure to
comply with the rules around sewage discharges.
Breaching
the permit rules means sewage discharges are illegal and water firms can be
prosecuted. A failure to meet permit requirements could also lead to water
companies being stripped of their licences to operate. The criminal inquiry is
the largest since investigators spent five years examining illegal sewage
dumping by Southern Water. Their investigation led to the water company being
fined a record £90m by a crown court judge.
Investigators
will be visiting some of the 2,200 sewage treatment plants run by Thames Water
and other companies to secure evidence as they prepare their case. The
investigation was sparked by research by Prof Peter Hammond that suggested the
scale of illegal sewage dumping by water companies was 10 times what the EA had
believed it to be.
The agency
said: “Our initial assessment indicates that there may have been widespread and
serious non-compliance of environmental permit conditions by all companies. We
take the implications of this extremely seriously and are committed to understanding
the scale and impact of any alleged offending.”
The crisis
in the water industry has reignited a debate about whether the regional
monopolies created by privatisation in 1989 should be taken back into public
ownership. Over three decades, Thames Water has been saddled with debt by a
succession of owners, with the company now owing £14bn to its creditors and
struggling to raise the cash needed to maintain its infrastructure.
The company
is in talks with the Treasury, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural
Affairs and Ofwat about a solution that could involve it being placed under a
special administration regime, under which its current owners would hand over
management to officials.
Thames
Water has turned to Montague, a City veteran whom several British governments
have tapped up to manage financial challenges at infrastructure companies. He
will take over from Ian Marchant, who told the board in April that he would
stand down next month.
As deputy
chair of Network Rail, Montague helped to create the non-profit,
government-controlled company to take on the running of Britain’s railway
tracks after the 2001 collapse of Railtrack. He helped to lay foundations for a
sale of British Energy, which operated UK nuclear power plants, after it faced
severe financial difficulties.
The heavily
indebted Yorkshire Water said it had raised £500m on Monday to shore up its
balance sheet. Its shareholders include Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund GIC
and the German private equity group Corsair Capital.
The vast
bulk of the cash will be funnelled immediately into the repayment of an
intercompany loan. These sorts of loans have become common in a sector that has
grown increasingly burdened by debt in recent years and Ofwat has sought to
rein in their use.
Yorkshire
Water and Thames Water are two of five firms that Ofwat said it believed to be
in precarious financial positions, along with Portsmouth Water, Southern Water
and SES Water.
A
spokesperson for Thames Water declined to comment on the size of the cash
injection it needed but said it retained “a strong liquidity position” and that
it was working “constructively” with shareholders.
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