In its final report published last summer, UK Government’s Independent Water Commission set out a series of 88 wide-ranging recommendations aimed at reshaping the water sector and our management of the water environment more generally. Having initially accepted five of the Commission’s recommendations, Government said a fuller response would come in the form of a Water White Paper.
The White Water Paper sets out their plan to implement the Commission’s recommendations
Last week, Government published that White Paper, setting out how they plan to implement those five recommendations, and others, as part of a ‘once-in-a-generation plan to transform the water system for good’.
Critics have said that the plan is in reality more of a rough to-do list, and admittedly on many aspects there is a lack of flesh on these bones, but it does provide us with a useful skeleton to build from. The paper points us towards a range of changes that will come, through future legislation, instruction from ministers and other routes.
The paper has a focus on water companies
Given the level of public interest in the sector, this focus is understandable. The paper sets out more detail on changes to rationalise complex water industry business planning, create a single water regulatory, and to put in place a more responsive regulatory approach that will find and fix problems faster.
There will be a new regime for improving the performance of poorly-performing water companies, and a Chief Engineer in the new regulator to provide a focus on infrastructure health.
The overarching aim is for wholescale changes that ensure better outcomes, delivering “safe and secure supplies of water, a protected and enhanced environment, a fair deal for customers and investors”.
This sounds positive, but what does a ‘protected and enhanced environment’ actually mean for nature? From the press release and executive summary, nature doesn’t at first feel very central to the changes proposed through the White Paper, but there are important commitments (as well as some areas of risk) buried in the pages that follow.
The ‘glass half-full’ view
Recognition of the need for joined-up plans across sectors
The paper rightly mentions the need for joined-up plans across sectors like the water industry, agriculture, transport and development. This is vital, as nature doesn’t care where pollution is coming from - it just needs it to be fixed. A regulator that looks at all sectors, and a set of plans that consider all issues, offer the best chance of tackling pollution, managing water sustainably and helping species recover.
Government is aware that chalk streams cannot be ignored
This is the latest Government publication that explicitly mentions chalk streams, with the White Paper promising that the reforms will ‘further embed action’ to improve them. Whilst each document brings only small policy shifts, together they show that Government is aware – thanks to the constant efforts of environmental organisations, MPs and Peers – that the conservation and restoration of chalk streams cannot be ignored.
We hope that that the upcoming Water Transition Plan promised by the Government will set out exactly what further action will look like. We'd like that to include more ambitious targets, a commitment to ending harmful abstraction from chalk streams, and dedicated funding for habitat restoration.