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Thames Water, known originally as the Thames Water Authority and after privatisation as Thames Water Utilities Limited, is the utility responsible for water supply and waste water treatment in parts of Greater London, Surrey, Gloucestershire, Wiltshire, and the Thames Valley in the United Kingdom. Originally it was also responsible for managing the rivers and water catchments of the area, and was the navigation authority of the non-tidal River Thames, but these responsibilities ceased with privatisation. The Company was listed on the London Stock Exchange and was once a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index but is now owned by Kemble Water Limited.
[edit] About Thames WaterThames Water is the UK's largest water and wastewater services company. Every day, it supplies 2,600 million litres of tap water to 8.5 million customers across London and the Thames Valley. It also removes and treats 2,800 million litres of sewage for an area covering 13.6 million customers. The Thames Water Authority was founded in 1973, under the terms of the Water Act 1973. Thames Water was then privatised in 1989, with transfer of its regulatory, river management and navigation responsibilities to the National Rivers Authority, which later became part of the Environment Agency.[1] In 2001, Thames Water plc was acquired by the German utility company RWE.[2] On 17 October 2006, RWE announced that it would sell Thames Water to Kemble Water Limited for £ 4.8 billion (since Thames Water has a pro forma net debt of £3.2 billion this implies an enterprise value of £8.0 billion). Kemble is a consortium led by an investment fund run by the Australian Macquarie Bank. Australian investment funds already have interests in South East Water and Mid Kent Water. The sale went ahead in December 2006.[3] Since its December 2006 sale, the company has refocused its efforts on improving its operational performance and this year has announced the largest ever capital investment (£1 billion) of any UK water company.[4] [edit] Utilities acquiredThe authority took over the following water supply utilities and catchment area management bodies:[5]
[edit] OperationsThames Water is responsible for some of the largest civil engineering programmes in Europe, including:
[edit] Criticism[edit] LeakagesThames Water has been repeatedly criticised for the amount of water that leaks from its pipes by the industry regulator Ofwat and fined for this. In May 2006 the figure was nearly 900 megalitres per day. In June 2006, Thames Water missed its target for reducing leakages for the third year in a row. [6] Also in June 2006 the firm announced a 31% rise in pre-tax profits to £346.5m. Jeremy Pelczer, Thames Water's former chief executive, noted that:
The Consumer Council, a customers' group, accused Thames Water for continuing to miss their targets for the past five years. According to Consumer Council spokesman Andrew Marsh,:
In July 2006, instead of a fine, which would have gone "to the exchequer" the company was required to spend an extra £150 million on repairs.[7] However, following the 2006 announcement of increased capital investment: In June 2007, Thames Water announced it had met and exceeded the 2006/07 leakage target set by the water regulator OFWAT, the first annual target that it had met since 2000.[8] In June 2008, Thames Water announced that, subject to audit, it had met and exceeded the 2007/08 leakage target.[8] [edit] PollutionIn January 2009, Thames Water was "fined £125,000 and ordered to pay £21,335 in clean up and investigation costs" after having pleaded guilty for a pollution of the River Wandle in September 2007[9]. [edit] References
[edit] External links[edit] Corporate sites[edit] Critical sites
Categories: River Thames | Companies based in Reading, Berkshire | London water infrastructure | Water companies of the United Kingdom | Utilities of the United Kingdom | Former nationalised industries of the United Kingdom | Organizations established in 1973 | 1989 disestablishments | Companies established in 1989 | Thames Water | Companies formerly listed on the London Stock Exchange | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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