Water bosses in England exploiting bonus loophole face crackdown

A picture


The government is to close loopholes which allow bosses of failing water companies to continue to receive large bonuses despite a ban passed last year, it can be revealed.Bosses of companies that illegally dumped sewage into England’s rivers and seas and presided over water shortages which left thousands of people in misery have still been paid millions in bonuses despite the ban.The previous environment secretary Steve Reed attempted to ban failing water companies from paying bonuses to chief executives and chief financial officers.However, the legislation passed in the Water (Special Measures) Act last year only referred to “performance-related” bonuses from specific regulated companies.MPs have said the loopholes allowed companies to get around the bonus ban by labelling payments differently or paying bosses through linked companies.

This means some bosses who have had their bonuses banned for presiding over pollution and water outages have been paid anyway.Thames Water had its bonuses banned after being deemed a failing company, but still plans to pay its top staff millions in “retention payments” from a controversial high-interest loan that was meant to be used to keep the firm afloat.This is now allowed as these are labelled as non-performance-related bonuses.Yorkshire Water was also banned from paying its bosses bonuses this year, but its chief executive, Nicola Shaw, netted £1.3m in an offshore parent company over two years.

The boss of South East Water, David Hinton, is on track for £400,000 in bonus pay by 2030 despite tens of thousands of people in Tunbridge Wells having had their water cut off for weeks.Wessex Water’s former boss Colin Skellett received a £170,000 bonus in the same year as the bonus ban on the utility.The payment was labelled as a bonus, but was allowed because it was made by a parent company.As a result of bonuses still being paid, Reed was accused of being “outwitted” by the water companies.Emma Reynolds, his successor, is expected to bring forward tough measures to close the loophole in the interim period when the current regulator, Ofwat, is handing over to a new “super-regulator”.

This will be part of a new water bill expected in the king’s speech in May.“We have warned the water companies to operate within the spirit as well as the letter of the law,” a Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs source said, “but it appears they haven’t, so we will need to look at a further crackdown”.Sources told the Guardian that under new plans, water CEOs would not be allowed to be paid bonuses via parent companies.Reynolds has already directed Ofwat to tighten the criteria for what constitutes a “failing” company, and will end the practice of performance bonuses being relabelled as other types of bonuses to get around the ban.The water minister, Emma Hardy, said: “It seems simple to me that bonuses should reflect performance, and if performance is not good enough, people should not get a bonus.

It is not just about the letter of the law, but about the spirit of the law.Ofwat has exposed serious transparency failings across the water sector, and we are therefore tightening transparency rules to shut down any attempt to dodge the bonus ban.”Feargal Sharkey, the water campaigner and former frontman of the Undertones, said the bonus loopholes were evident before the legislation was passed.He said: “The loophole was obvious from the beginning.The water companies were never going to operate within the spirit of the law.

They have always tested the limits of the law.They have misled governments and polluted the environment, so they were never going to do the right thing.I was not surprised at all.They were warned before the Water (Special Measures) Act became law that this would happen.”Mike Martin, the Liberal Democrat MP for Tunbridge Wells, where failures by South East Water meant his constituents were without water for weeks, said Hinton should “obviously” not get his bonus.

He said “It is outrageous these loopholes haven’t already been closed”.An Ofwat spokesperson said £4m in bonuses had been blocked this financial year despite the loopholes.They said the regulator was consulting on changes to the ban.Ofwat has previously said it expected companies to act within the spirit of the law.Last year, it said it was considering forcing water companies to disclose all pay to bosses from related companies after the Guardian’s reporting.

The best public interest journalism relies on first-hand accounts from people in the know.If you have something to share on this subject, you can contact us confidentially using the following methods:The Guardian app has a tool to send tips about stories.Messages are end to end encrypted and concealed within the routine activity that every Guardian mobile app performs.This prevents an observer from knowing that you are communicating with us at all, let alone what is being said.If you don’t already have the Guardian app, download it (iOS/Android) and go to the menu.

Select ‘Secure Messaging’.Our guide at theguardian.com/tips lists several ways to contact us securely, and discusses the pros and cons of each.
trendingSee all
A picture

Thinking of trashing a small business on social media? Please, think again

A viral Reddit post mocks a $22 grilled cheese sandwich and helps to sink a Bay Area shop. A restaurant owner is forced to push back on a viral complaint. A small business owner in Maine faces a viral backlash after posting a “No ICE” sign. The owner of a furniture store mistakenly receives backlash after being confused with another store. An influencer calls out a South Carolina boutique in a TikTok video after a negative shopping experience

A picture

Bank chairs backtracking on climate commitments could face shareholder revolts

Bank chairs who water down their lenders’ climate commitments this year could face embarrassing shareholder revolts as campaigners try to hold bosses to account for environmental backtracking.ShareAction, a campaign group for responsible investment, will be issuing detailed reports to pension funds and asset managers in the coming weeks, outlining whether 34 of the world’s largest lenders are sticking to their climate goals.Its reports will closely analyse any changes in lenders’ environmental policies, which are usually published alongside their annual reports.The UK’s largest banks will be among the first under the microscope, with NatWest, Lloyds and HSBC all due to release their annual reports by the end of February. Barclays will publish its annual report on Tuesday

A picture

Battle of the chatbots: Anthropic and OpenAI go head-to-head over ads in their AI products

The Seahawks and the Patriots aren’t the only ones gearing up for a fight.AI rivals Anthropic and OpenAI have launched a war of ads trying to court corporate America during one of the biggest entertainment nights of the year.Ahead of the Super Bowl, Anthropic has launched a series of ads going hard at its rival.For the scrawny 23-year-old who wants a six-pack, a ripped older man who is supposed to depict a chatbot suggests insoles that “help short kings stand tall” because “confidence isn’t just built in the gym”. And for the man trying to improve communication with his mom: his therapist prescribes “a mature dating site that connects sensitive cubs with roaring cougars” in case he can’t fix that relationship

A picture

Why has Elon Musk merged his rocket company with his AI startup?

The acquisition of xAI by SpaceX is a typical Elon Musk deal: big numbers backed by big ambition.As well as extending “the light of consciousness to the stars”, as Musk described it, the transaction creates a business worth $1.25tn (£920bn) by combining Musk’s rocket company with his artificial intelligence startup. It values SpaceX at $1tn and xAI at $250bn, with a stock market flotation expected in June to time with Musk’s birthday and a planetary alignment.However, there are questions over the deal, such as whether it is good for SpaceX’s non-Musk shareholders and whether the technological premise behind it can succeed

A picture

Ilia Malinin holds off resurgent Japan to seal repeat US team figure skating gold

The United States held off a late charge from Japan to retain the Olympic team figure skating title on Sunday, with Ilia Malinin delivering in the men’s free skate to secure gold after three days of competition. Japan finished with silver, while host nation Italy claimed bronze.The United States survived a final-day surge from Japan to retain the Olympic team figure skating title on Sunday night, with Ilia Malinin delivering under intense pressure in the men’s free skate to secure gold at the Milano Cortina Games. Japan finished one point behind in silver, while host nation Italy claimed bronze after three days of tightly contested competition.The final standings – 69 points for the United States, 68 for Japan and 60 for Italy – reflected just how narrow the margin was in one of the most dramatic Olympic team events since the format was introduced in 2014

A picture

Breezy Johnson embraces the beauty and madness of downhill to win Olympic gold

The 30-year-old from Wyoming has labored in the shadow of household names like Lindsey Vonn and Mikaela Shiffrin. On Sunday, she made history of her ownFor years, Breezy Johnson was the other American alpine skier. The one with the near-misses, the injuries, the suspension and the unfortunate timing to exist in the same stable at the same time as Lindsey Vonn and Mikaela Shiffrin. On Sunday, three weeks after her 30th birthday in the shadow of the Dolomites above Cortina d’Ampezzo, she became an Olympic champion.Johnson crossed first in the women’s downhill at the Milano Cortina Games by four-hundredths of a second – the slightest winning margin in the event’s Olympic history outside the dead heat in 2014 – to become just the second American woman to win the sport’s most prestigious title