Thames Water is £18.3 billion underwater in debts, cannot find new equity investors and its current shareholders are turning off the tap. If the company cannot pay those debts, under the current system, Ofwat’s ‘special administration regime’ will kick in – a.k.a. forced nationalisation. That would be somewhat awkward for the government, which has staunchly defended water privatisation. A summer collapse of Thames Water would be a major headache for Sunak…
A row is raging inside Labour about how they would deal with the situation. Labour’s left has long called for water nationalisation, a key plank of Corbyn era policy, which is now being pushed in a new campaign by Clive Lewis and John McDonnell. But Starmer’s team is privately briefing the water industry that any form of even part nationalisation will not be anywhere near the manifesto despite current events – last year Rachel Reeves publicly ditched their policy on water renationalisation. According to industry insiders, Labour is instead soft testing the idea of a community interest company to replace the failing utility provider. Starmer told reporters earlier this year that it’s ‘time for a rethink’ on water privatisation, but then ruled out nationalisation. Clear as mud…
There is scant evidence that any form of nationalisation or ‘community ownership’ would help Thames. Nationalised water companies are even less efficient, as the experience in Ireland and Northern Ireland shows. In Scotland, the then Labour government changed the company’s reporting regime so that its performance was artificially enhanced. The UK’s water bills are among the lowest in developed economies. Would they be under Labour…

Guido brings you an update on the radical design for a floating temporary parliament during renovation work at Westminster. Gensler, the firm vying for a £160 million contract to build the structure have revealed images showing inside the slug. The Commons and Lords chambers would be exactly the same dimensions as their original but it would house a different Royal Gallery and Central Lobby.

The building would allow parliament to be renovated in only six years without working around politicians – the “full decant” option. It could be built in time for the vote on the third runway to be held within…

The firm that built GCHQ and the US Embassy in London reckons it could save the taxpayer more than £1.8 billion if it was given a contract to re-house MPs. The proposed building would also allow parliament to be renovated in only six years without working around politicians.

The architectural firm Gensler plan to create a floating structure right next to the Palace where both houses could sit at the same time and committee rooms could meet. Initial cost of what Guido is dubbing the “Slug-on-Thames” is £160 million and it would be assembled by boats and dismantled when the Palace of Westminster is restored. Who knows, we might even keep it…