UK Parliament / Open data

Water Industry

Proceeding contribution from Gavin Shuker (Labour) in the House of Commons on Tuesday, 5 November 2013. It occurred during Backbench debate on Water Industry.

No, that is not the case. The Flood and Water Management Act 2010 created the legislative framework for that measure.

I want to talk about some of the measures that have been trumpeted as the solution to bring about water affordability and to stop the rising tide of householders who are finding themselves in water poverty or unable to pay their water bills. The approach of the Water Bill is entirely the wrong way around. It is interesting to hear Government Members say that the only answer is greater competition. I accept that retail business competition could be a good way of reducing water usage. That has made a profound difference north of the border. That is why we have supported it continually. The idea came out of the Cave review.

However, at a time when many parts of the UK are much more water-scarce than other parts of the continent and even parts of Africa, it is short-sighted to think that that idea will work without considering abstraction reform as well. The Government have chosen to punt that issue into the 2020s—until 2025—for the next Government to look at. If we do not deal with scarcity in many parts of the country, there will be a major problem. Instead, the Government have looked for a

number of measures that will shake up the industry and make them look pro-reform, but that will not necessarily tackle the issue of abstraction.

There is an idea that the only answer to the problem of some parts of the country being water-rich and others water-poor is to build pipelines. I remind the House that 2% of the country’s energy usage already goes on water. There is a major carbon cost to that idea. If people do not believe that that would end up on people’s bills, they are wrong.

Type
Proceeding contribution
Reference
570 cc202-3 
Session
2013-14
Chamber / Committee
House of Commons chamber
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