
England’s Water Companies 14 Years of Environmental Performance and Implications of new Pollution Incident Reduction Plans (PIRPs)
England’s Water Companies14 Years of Environmental Performance
Analysis of EPA star ratings from 2011 to 2024 reveals a sector in decline, with the worst recorded performance in 2024 and only one company achieving top marks.
The Environment Agency’s Environmental Performance Assessment (EPA) is the definitive measure of how well England’s water companies protect the environment. Every year since 2011, the EA has rated all nine water and sewerage companies on pollution incidents, permit compliance, self-reporting, and delivery of environmental programmes. The results paint a troubling picture: after modest gains during 2016-2020, the sector has entered a period of sustained decline.
The 2024 results mark a new low. With a sector average of just 2.11 stars out of 4, it’s the worst year in the 14-year dataset. Only Severn Trent Water achieved the top 4-star rating. At the other end, Thames Water—serving 15 million customers across London and the Thames Valley—fell to just 1 star, recording 33 serious pollution incidents in a single year.
- Severn Trent Water is the only company to achieve 4 stars in 2024 and has the best 14-year average (3.50 stars)
- Thames Water fell to 1 star in 2024, down from 3 stars in 2011, with 33 serious pollution incidents
- South West Water recorded 108 pollution incidents per 10,000km of sewer—nearly three times the red threshold
- Southern Water has received 1 star three times (2013, 2019, 2021) following its £90m fine in 2021
- The 2020 peak of 3.33 stars now appears to be an anomaly, possibly linked to reduced demand during COVID lockdowns
- New PIRP requirements from April 2026 will require annual pollution reduction plans with CEO criminal liability
How Performance Has Changed Over 14 Years
The sector’s trajectory shows three distinct phases. During AMP5 (2011-2015), performance was stable but unremarkable, averaging 2.78 stars. AMP6 (2016-2020) brought improvement, peaking at 3.33 stars in 2020—the only year when the sector average exceeded 3 stars. But AMP7 (2021-2024) has been characterised by collapse: the average fell to 2.47 stars, with 2024 hitting rock bottom at 2.11.
The exceptional 2020 result may be partially explained by reduced water demand during COVID-19 lockdowns, which eased pressure on sewerage infrastructure. The rapid deterioration since then suggests the underlying problems were never addressed—they were simply masked by unusual circumstances.
Company Rankings: Best to Worst
Performance varies dramatically across the nine companies. Severn Trent Water stands out as the clear leader, with a 14-year average of 3.50 stars and 9 years at the top 4-star rating. At the opposite end, South West Water and Southern Water have the worst track records, each averaging below 2.15 stars and recording multiple 1-star years.
The heatmap reveals patterns that averages obscure. Wessex Water achieved 4 stars seven times but has slumped to 2 stars in three of the last four years. United Utilities shows similar volatility—four 4-star years but dropping to 2 stars in 2024. Only Severn Trent has maintained consistent excellence, never falling below 3 stars in the entire dataset.
| Rank | Company | 14-Year Avg | 4★ Years | 1★ Years | 2024 | Trend |
|---|
The 2024 Crisis in Detail
The 2024 results reveal a sector-wide failure. Seven of nine companies received just 2 stars. Thames Water’s collapse to 1 star is particularly significant given its scale—it serves more customers than any other English water company. Its 33 serious pollution incidents represent more than the combined total of the next three worst performers.
Severn Trent Water
Northumbrian Water
Yorkshire Water
United Utilities
Wessex Water
Anglian Water
Southern Water
South West Water
Thames Water
Why serious incidents matter most: While South West Water has the highest total incident rate (108 per 10,000km), Thames Water’s 33 serious incidents indicate more severe environmental harm. Serious incidents (Categories 1-2) involve significant or major environmental damage and attract the largest penalties—Southern Water’s 2021 prosecution resulted in a £90 million fine.
New Regulatory Requirements from 2026
The government has responded to the sector’s declining performance with the Water (Special Measures) Act 2025, which introduces mandatory Pollution Incident Reduction Plans (PIRPs). From 1 April 2026, every water company must publish an annual plan setting out how they will reduce pollution incidents, with the first implementation report due by 1 April 2027.
What PIRPs require:
- Analysis of all pollution incidents from the previous year, including root causes
- Details of measures already in place and their effectiveness
- Planned new measures with quantified expected impact
- Personal statement from the CEO approving the plan
CEO liability: Failure to publish a compliant PIRP is a criminal offence. CEOs can only avoid personal prosecution by proving they “took all reasonable steps” to ensure compliance.
The PIRP framework represents a fundamental shift in accountability. Companies must now demonstrate not just what went wrong, but why—and provide credible plans to prevent recurrence. For companies like Thames Water with 33 serious incidents, or South West Water with 108 total incidents, the burden of proof will be substantial.
The standardised measures that PIRPs must address include telemetry installation, predictive analytics, proactive maintenance, power resilience, and customer engagement to reduce blockages. Companies are also required to demonstrate “cultural change”—business-wide behavioural improvements that address the systemic causes of pollution.
Hypothetical PIRP Penalty Exposure Based on 2024 Incidents
While the PIRP requirements don’t take effect until April 2026, applying the new enforcement framework to 2024 incident data provides a useful illustration of the financial exposure water companies now face. Based on Environment Agency penalty benchmarks and recent case law—including Southern Water’s £90m fine in 2021—we estimate the sector’s total penalty exposure from 2024 incidents alone could range from £150 million to £400 million.
| Company | 2024 Star | Total Incidents | Serious (Cat 1-2) | RAG Status | Risk Level | Est. Penalty Exposure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thames Water | 1★ | 43 | 33 | Red | CRITICAL | £80-150m |
| South West Water | 2★ | 108 | 4 | Red | CRITICAL | £25-60m |
| Southern Water | 2★ | 68 | 15 | Red | CRITICAL | £40-80m |
| Yorkshire Water | 2★ | 29 | 13 | Green | HIGH | £20-50m |
| Anglian Water | 2★ | 57 | 7 | Red | HIGH | £15-35m |
| Wessex Water | 2★ | 62 | 0 | Red | MEDIUM | £5-15m |
| United Utilities | 2★ | 45 | 2 | Red | MEDIUM | £8-20m |
| Northumbrian Water | 2★ | 39 | 0 | Red | MEDIUM | £3-10m |
| Severn Trent Water | 4★ | 29 | 1 | Green | LOW | £2-8m |
Note: These estimates reflect direct regulatory penalties only. They do not include additional financial exposure from civil liability claims, legal costs, remediation expenses, increased insurance premiums, credit rating impacts, or reputational damage—all of which can substantially exceed the penalty amounts themselves. For example, Thames Water’s ongoing financial difficulties have been compounded by regulatory concerns, affecting its ability to raise capital and refinance debt.
What This Means for AMP8
As the sector enters AMP8 (2025-2030), the combination of historically poor performance and new PIRP requirements creates unprecedented pressure. Companies face a choice: invest significantly more in infrastructure and operations, or risk escalating regulatory enforcement and potential criminal prosecution of senior executives.
The 14-year EPA dataset suggests that incremental improvements won’t be sufficient. The sector achieved its best result in 2020 at 3.33 stars—still below the 4-star standard that only one company now meets. For the seven companies currently at 2 stars, reaching that level will require transformational change, not just marginal gains.
With public and political scrutiny at unprecedented levels, the water industry faces a defining period. The data is clear: performance has declined significantly since 2020, serious pollution incidents remain too common, and only one company demonstrates that excellence is achievable. The question now is whether the rest of the sector can close the gap before the new enforcement regime takes full effect.
| Company | 2024 Rating | Total Incidents | Serious Incidents | 2011→2024 Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Severn Trent Water | 4★ | 29 | 1 | +1 (3→4) |
| Northumbrian Water | 2★ | 39 | 0 | 0 (2→2) |
| Yorkshire Water | 2★ | 29 | 13 | 0 (2→2) |
| United Utilities | 2★ | 45 | 2 | -1 (3→2) |
| Wessex Water | 2★ | 62 | 0 | -2 (4→2) |
| Anglian Water | 2★ | 57 | 7 | -1 (3→2) |
| Southern Water | 2★ | 68 | 15 | 0 (2→2) |
| South West Water | 2★ | 108 | 4 | +1 (1→2) |
| Thames Water | 1★ | 43 | 33 | -2 (3→1) |
Disclaimer
This analysis is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or investment advice. Penalty exposure estimates are hypothetical illustrations based on publicly available Environment Agency data, published sentencing guidelines, and recent enforcement precedents. Actual penalties depend on specific incident circumstances, regulatory discretion, and legal proceedings.
Forward-looking statements regarding PIRP requirements and potential enforcement outcomes are based on current legislation and guidance, which may be subject to change. Readers should consult qualified legal and financial advisors for advice specific to their circumstances.
Data sources: Environment Agency EPA Results 2011-2024; EA PIRP Guidance (January 2026); Water (Special Measures) Act 2025.