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UK minister rejects Thames Water rescue, nationalisation more likely

UK minister rejects Thames Water rescue, nationalisation more likely

FILE PHOTO: A drone view shows people using kayaks and paddle boards in the River Thames at Teddington Lock, London’s first official river bathing water site, as temperatures climb over the bank holiday weekend due to a heat dome spreading across the region, in London, Britain, May 24, 2026. REUTERS/Isabel Infantes/File Photo

The British government has rejected a £10 billion ($13 billion) rescue proposal for Thames Water, increasing the likelihood that the country’s largest water supplier will be nationalised.

Environment Minister Emma Reynolds said on Tuesday it was her “early view” that the proposal from creditors did not do enough to protect consumers or the environment, though she added regulator Ofwat will have the final say. A ruling is expected this summer, before Thames runs out of cash later this year.

The proposal is the only one on the table for the utility, which has been fending off financial collapse since 2023, struggling with £20 billion of debt, heavy fines for sewage pollution and ageing infrastructure.

Ofwat said it was reviewing a letter from Reynolds and was yet to make a decision on the proposed deal.

SEWAGE BACKLASH

Reynolds told parliament the plan could unfairly push costs onto consumers and delay environmental improvements after years of sewage spills and rising bills triggered public anger.

“We will stand ready for all eventualities including SAR,” she said, referring to the government’s special administration regime, a form of temporary public ownership.

The creditor group, which includes Invesco, Elliott Management and Silver Point Capital, said it did not recognise Reynolds’ characterisation.

A spokesperson said the proposal would not raise customer bills beyond Ofwat’s plans and offered the fastest route to environmental improvements, while warning SAR would require billions of pounds in government support.

SAR would keep water flowing to Thames Water’s 16 million customers in London and southern England, but could add the company’s debt to the already stretched public balance sheet and deter foreign investors if large write-downs follow.

Reynolds said SAR could be triggered either by insolvency or by serious breaches of licence conditions, including environmental standards.

SYMBOL OF FAILURE

Thames Water has become a symbol of failure in Britain’s privatised water sector, blamed for river pollution while previous owners loaded it with debt and paid dividends.

The government has branded the sector broken and is working on an overhaul, including plans for a new regulator to replace Ofwat.

For now, Ofwat is weighing the creditor plan, balancing record fines – including £123 million last year – against warnings that investment will dry up without regulatory leniency.

Reynolds said she was not convinced by creditors’ request to reduce performance standards.

Uncertainty over potential fines was said to be behind U.S. private equity firm KKR’s decision to walk away from a takeover bid for Thames Water last year.

Ofwat said in its Tuesday statement it was continuing to engage with the creditor group with a view to assessing whether their plan would strengthen Thames Water’s financial resilience to the benefit of customers and the environment.

Under that plan, £3.35 billion would be injected into Thames Water, alongside a new £6.55 billion debt facility, while £9.4 billion of debt would be written off.

If approved by Ofwat, the plan would require High Court sign-off, while any licence changes would be subject to public consultation.

Thames Water said a market-led solution was the best way to deliver its turnaround.

($1 = 0.7453 pounds)

(Reporting by Sarah Young)

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