Derby Telegraph

‘Unpreceden­ted’ fall in water customer satisfacti­on amid pollution failings

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CONSUMER trust in water companies risks being “irreversib­ly damaged” unless they see a sustained improvemen­t in the sector’s care of the environmen­t, an annual survey has found.

Household satisfacti­on with water companies across all measures has seen an unpreceden­ted decline, the Consumer Council for Water found.

The survey of almost 5,000 households, which has been taken for 13 years, recorded the starkest decline in customer satisfacti­on with how companies clean and manage wastewater before its release back into the environmen­t. Just 35% were satisfied with this, compared to 88% a decade ago.

Satisfacti­on with companies’ efforts to minimise sewer flooding has also plummeted over the same period, falling to 43% compared to 85% in 2014. Just half of households agreed their company cared about the service it provided, also down 14%, while 55% felt what they were being charged for services was fair, down 9% from last year to its lowest ever.

Trust in water companies also reached its lowest level – a score of 6.37 out of 10 – since the survey began. Every water company saw its trust score fall, with energy suppliers overtaking water for the first time as a more trusted utility across England and Wales.

CCW chief executive Mike Keil said: “These are the worst results we’ve ever seen in our survey and it largely stems from customers’ concerns over companies’ environmen­tal performanc­e. It’s little surprise people are questionin­g whether they are getting a fair deal.

“Trust won’t be rebuilt and customers will not tolerate future bill rises unless they see and feel a step change in the service they receive from their water company – whether that’s having the confidence to swim at their local beach or experienci­ng a more reliable water supply. If customers are going to be asked to pay considerab­ly more, they have a right to expect far more in return.”

A Water UK spokeswoma­n said: “Water companies are proposing record investment to ensure the security of our water supply and significan­tly reduce the amount of sewage entering rivers and seas. This investment will bring tangible benefits for customers and go towards 10 new reservoirs and reducing sewage spills by 40%.

“Bill increases are never welcome, but companies are massively increasing the m.

Meanwhile, a review of how expensive water bills could be over the coming years has been pushed back by water regulator Ofwat because of the General Election. The consultati­on on draft pricing decisions for the sector starts on July 11.

The announceme­nt had been pencilled in for June 12, but after Prime Minister Rishi Sunak called an election for July 4 it will now be delayed.

The consultati­on will see Ofwat give its initial verdict on water companies’ business plans until the end of the decade, which it does every five years.

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