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Thu September 26 2024

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MPs warn taps could run dry by 2040

10 Jul 20 Britain’s water pipes are so leaky that we could run out of water altogether within 20 years, MPs are warning.

A report from the House of Commons public accounts committee today says that all the bodies responsible for the UK鈥檚 water supply 鈥 Defra, Ofwat and the Environment Agency 鈥 have 鈥渢aken their eye off the ball鈥 and must take urgent action. Otherwise our water supply will simply dry up.

鈥淚t is wholly unacceptable that over 3 billion litres are wasted every day through leakage, with no improvement in the last 20 years,鈥 the report says.

鈥淔rom a high of over 4.5 billion litres a day in the early 1990s, daily losses through leakage fell to around 3 billion at the turn of the century. However, this reduction was followed by over a decade of complacency and inaction, which has meant water leakage is now a hugely pressing problem.鈥

It continues: 鈥淣o one organisation has got a thorough grip on dealing with this issue and driving the change necessary. The Department [for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs] urged water companies in 2016 to make tackling leakage a much higher priority. However, there has still been little progress.鈥

The committee acknowledged that some action was now being taken but remained 鈥渦nconvinced鈥 it was enough.

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鈥淭he Department has belatedly set annual targets for water companies and longer-term targets to reduce leakage by a third by 2030 and by half by 2050,鈥 the report says. 鈥淥fwat assures us that companies are exposed to substantial penalties if they do not meet their targets over the next five years and is confident that the worst performing companies are now starting to get their act together. Ofwat now expects leakage to fall by 16% between 2020 and 2025, which would result in 561 million litres of water a day being saved. However, meeting the targets relies on unknown and untested approaches. We are unconvinced by Ofwat鈥檚 hope that water companies will 鈥榮urprise themselves鈥 at what they can achieve, and call on the Department and Ofwat to be more proactive in ensuring companies meet leakage targets.鈥

Public accounts committee chair Meg Hillier MP said: 鈥淚t is very hard to imagine, in this country, turning the tap and not having enough clean, drinkable water come out - but that is exactly what we now face. Continued inaction by the water industry means we continue to lose one fifth of our daily supply to leaks.

鈥淓mpty words on climate commitments and unfunded public information campaigns will get us where we鈥檝e got the last 20 years: nowhere. Defra has failed to lead and water companies have failed to act: we look now to the Department to step up, make up for lost time and see we get action before it鈥檚 too late.鈥

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