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20 January 2026

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Condition monitoring surveys to be compulsory for water companies

2 hours The government has published a long-awaited white paper setting out proposed reforms for regulation of the water industry.

Image by Lisa Runnels from Pixabay
Image by Lisa Runnels from Pixabay

The water white paper, published by the Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs sets out powers for a new industry regulator, with the aim of tougher oversight and stronger accountability for water companies.

For the first time in two decades, a chief engineer will sit inside the new single water regulator. Defra says that this will 鈥渂ring back the hands-on checks of water infrastructure Ofwat has failed to provide, ending the days of water firms marking their own homework, resulting in crumbling pipes and unreliable services鈥.聽

The new regulator will introduce an 鈥楳OT鈥 approach for water company infrastructure, requiring condition monitoring surveys 鈥 health checks 鈥 on pipes, pumps and more. The idea is that this will promote a culture of preventative maintenance rather than crisis management.

Environment secretary Emma Reynolds said: 鈥淭hese are once-in-a-generation reforms for our water system 鈥 tough oversight, real accountability, and no more excuses. Water companies will have nowhere to hide from poor performance, customers will get the service they deserve, and investors will see a system built for the future. 聽This builds on the tough action we鈥檝e already delivered, from record investment to banning unfair bonuses.鈥

A 2026 transition plan will set out the path to this new system, and a new water reform bill will bring forward the legislation needed enable the system to take effect.

Environmental Industries Commission chief executive Kate Jennings said: 鈥淲e welcome the government鈥檚 water white paper and its focus on building a resilient, forward-looking water system. The priorities for our members have always been rapid delivery of long-term water planning, strong governance, and a central role for engineering and environmental features in design, appraisal, and assurance. This white paper is a step-change in meeting that.

鈥淥ur sector has global expertise in turning these ambitions into practical, cost-effective solutions. With clear delivery mechanisms and close collaboration with government and industry, the UK can strengthen water resilience while supporting growth and high-quality jobs and our members will be integral strategic delivery partners in achieving the aims of the white paper.鈥

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