Southern Water considers shipping supplies from Norwegian fjords

By The Guardian (World News) | Created at 2024-09-26 12:30:16 | Updated at 2024-09-30 13:29:27 4 days ago
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Southern Water, one of Britain’s biggest water companies, is drawing up contingency plans to tanker water from Norway to deal with future supply shortages and drought.

Southern, which has 2.7 million customers for drinking water supply in the south-east of England, is in discussions with the UK private company Extreme Drought Resilience Service (ESRD) to ship in water from Norwegian fjords when needed, the Financial Times reported.

ESRD supplies water in tetrapak cartons, shipping containers or megalitres delivered by sea tanker.

Southern plans to pay for the water from customers’ bills, and has said that using tankers would be a “last-resort contingency measure”. Its managing director for water, Tim Mcmahon, told the FT: “Nevertheless, it’s right that we work with regulators to consider all possibilities into the mid 2030s.”

The Environment Agency is understood to be in contact with Norwegian regulators about the plan, which the agency believes reflects the company’s delayed delivery of crucial supply schemes.

The agency will review Southern’s proposed options, including sea tankering from Norway, through a public consultation and consider the environmental acceptability of this.

It expects the company to reduce reliance, as part of its drought planning, on taking more water from the River Test in Hampshire, one of the world’s most precious chalk streams and designated as a site of special scientific interest, and the River Itchen special area of conservation.

Water companies are lobbying regulators to raise bills significantly over the next five years to improve infrastructure. Campaigners argue that consumers have already paid for upgrades that have not been carried out.

Greenpeace UK’s chief scientist, Doug Parr, said: “Decades of neglecting its own infrastructure have left Southern Water having to choose between unappealing options as the climate crisis threatens supplies. Causing permanent damage to local ecosystems by taking more water would be a further foolish concession to the short-termism that got us into this mess.

“Tankering in huge quantities of water from Norway will inevitably be a costly and carbon-intensive alternative to that of doing a better job with the water resources that are available in a rainy country like the UK … Despite the obvious failings of planning, water companies need to start thinking of potable fresh water as a precious and finite resource, and plan to start treating it as such.”

In July, the chief executive of Southern Water received a £183,000 bonus despite submitting a business plan that was criticised by the industry regulator for England and Wales, Ofwat, and attempting to raise water bills more than any other English water company.

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Ofwat said the business plan “fell short” of minimum expectations and categorised it as “inadequate”. However, it still provisionally allowed a bill increase from £420 to £603, the biggest rise in the country as the company tries to raise funds to fix leaky infrastructure.

Southern is majority owned by the Australian investor Macquarie – which has been criticised for its stewardship of Thames Water – after it received a £1bn cash injection to save it from possible renationalisation in 2021. A further £550m was invested into the company last year.

Southern Water has been approached for comment.

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