Labour says Reform UK ‘trying to divide communities’ ahead of Farage speech on crime - UK politics live | Politics

Published: 2025-07-21 09:59:01 | Views: 16


Key events

Helena Horton
Helena Horton

Helena Horton, an environment reporter for the Guardian, explains how the government has reacted to the much-anticipated final report from the Independent Water Commission. Here is a snippet from her story:

The government is expected to adopt the recommendation for England and Wales made in the review it commissioned from Sir Jon Cunliffe, a former deputy governor of the Bank of England, which was released on Monday.

Critics have said Ofwat has presided over a culture of underinvestment in infrastructure and financial mismanagement by water companies since its creation in 1989, when the industry was privatised.

Thames Water, the most troubling case for the government and the UK’s largest water company, is loaded with £20bn in debt and struggling to stave off financial collapse into a special administration, a form of temporary nationalisation.

Cunliffe’s review suggested a new regulator, with powers to “direct”, or take control of, failing water firms.

Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today Programme, Cunliffe said Ofwat had “failed” because “for many years it didn’t have the powers”. He added: “To be blunt about it, it was directed by government to take a light touch to regulation.”

Cunliffe said the complexities of the water industry required “a broader, less monolithic and a less desk-based approach to economic regulation and to the oversight of companies’ performance against their licences”.

Emma Hardy, the minister for water and flooding, said the government would spend the summer examining how many of the report’s 88 recommendations to adopt.

A major review into the water sector in England and Wales says the regulator Ofwat should be scrapped.

Sir John Cunliffe, author of the report, tells @JustinOnWeb Ofwat was 'encouraged by government to take a light-touch approach to regulations'.
#R4Today

— BBC Radio 4 Today (@BBCr4today) July 21, 2025
Share

Updated at 



Source link