A MAJOR water firm has warned it may have to slap customers with a hose pipe ban this summer amid a looming risk of drought.
Thames Water bosses have cautioned households may be hit with restrictions in weeks due to warm weather.
Appearing before MPs on the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee, chief executive Chris Weston said the company was doing “all we need to” to prepare for potential water shortages.
But while he said he was confident the company will not run out of water, he raised the possibility of curbing customers’ water use depending on the weather in the coming weeks.
Thames Water is the UK’s biggest water company, serving 16 million customers in the South East of England, a heavily water-stressed area of the country.
The Environment Agency has warned of the potential risk of drought this summer following the driest start to spring in England for 61 years.
While there are currently no hosepipe bans planned, water companies might have to implement measures including restrictions in the months ahead, the regulator has warned.
Mr Weston said the company is going through a process of making sure assets are available, reservoirs are as full as possible, and that critical maintenance is carried out, “so we are as prepared as best we can be for a drought”.
The business is also starting to communicate with its customers about the importance of conserving water, he added.
“At the moment, from what I can see, we have learned the lessons from the situation in 2022 and we are doing all we need to do at the moment to prepare for water shortages,” he told MPs.
“I hope that is not necessary,” he added.
“I am confident we won’t run out of water, I’m not confident we won’t have to restrict usage, because that will depend on what the weather does and what rainfall happens between now and the summer.”
Of course, the warning from Thames Water is just that and may not come into force.
Mr Weston also told MPs that Thames Water’s £250 million desalination plant, which is intended to provide drinking water supplies from seawater, will not be working this year to meet potential water shortages.
It was also not functioning in 2022 when the utility giant reportedly came “dangerously close” to running out of water amid drought and record heatwaves.
Mr Weston labelled the facility a “bad investment”, and said he wondered why it had been built in the first place.
The last hosepipe ban in the UK came into force in the summer of 2023 following scorching temperatures.
South East Water imposed restrictions on customers in Kent and Sussex in late June.
It meant households were forbidden from using hosepipes to water their gardens, clean cars and fill paddling pools.
The company said it was bringing in the ban after demand for drinking water hit record levels that month.
Customers caught breaking the rules faced a £1,000 fine.
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