A Cross-party Commitment
With just a few days to go until the General election, we look back at the Cross Party Panel at the UK River Summit last month. We will be publishing sections of the panel discussions each day this week.
The UK River Summit took place at Morden Hall on May 21st. Unbeknown to us at the time, it was the day before the general election was announced. Perhaps it was not a coincidence that no one from the Conservative party was able to join us although the invitations were sent in the preceding months so we suspect it was just one contributing factor….
In the spirit of collaboration, we invited representatives from the major political parties. We had Tim Farron, the environmental spokesperson for the Liberal Democrats, Toby Perkins, MP for Chesterfield and Shadow Secretary for Nature and Rural Affairs and Kat Foxhall, Green Party District Councilor, with the panel chair being the CEO of River Action, James Wallace. A special guest had agreed to join a little later as well. Please see below the first 20 minutes of the panel discussion, some of the politician’s pledges, and what they see as their key focuses in relation to water.
James Wallace opens the panel:
”We are going to run out of water in this country and dare I say it we are woefully prepared. That is a great concern to us as citizens and as voters as well. So having had a panel where we were lucky enough to hear from a water company boss, leading activists, journalists and a regulator and so on and also a representative of the industry, we're now going to hear from three politicians and we have a special guest who's going to join us as well part way through. And what we're hoping in this exercise is to try and understand a bit of analysis on the past, you know, what could we have done better and differently, but also what would they like to do if they were given the opportunity to effectively run DEFRA and to be responsible for the Treasury. And we'll talk about things like regulatory reform and so on. So get ready for your questions. We will make sure there's some time towards the end for that. So to introduce our panelists, would you mind standing up, the three of you, so everyone can see who you are, thank you…
We have Toby Perkins, who's made a long journey down from Chesterfield, MP for Chesterfield and also the Shadow Minister for Nature and Rural Affairs. We have Kat Foxhall, who's actually just over the hill from me in Wiltshire, but we didn't know each other until the other day, Green Party District Councillor and Nature Recovery Champion and you work across the Vale of the White Horse, so if anyone knows the Bronze Age track known as the Ridgeway, it's that sort of area. And then Tim Farron, you've made a long journey as well from Westmoreland and Longsdale, MP and also ex-leader of the Liberal Democrat Party, as I'm sure you all know, and current environmental spokesman for the party. So thank you, all three of you.”
“So what we're going to do to start off, and I'm going to sit down now as well, is to hear a little bit about the past. I'd like you all to introduce yourselves, a little bit about your particular interest in this subject of water scarcity. I'm going to ask you two questions at once.
-One is where have things gone wrong from your point of view? We're talking politically here, so we're thinking about things like regulation, finance and so on. So a brief summary please.
-Two, just briefly, to just paint a bit of a picture for the floor, what is it that you would like to see change so that you could tackle the freshwater emergency?
I'll start with you, Toby…”
Manifesto Commitments
Katherine Foxhall, Green Party
“I think the key Green Party point is to bring water back into public ownership and to public responsibility for the water. That whatever system replaces it is fair, particularly to lowest incomes, families and households, and to all of the people who need to use water. Bringing water back into public ownership is the key Green Party position. But we also recognise that that's only the start, that we then need to go much further. It's really easy to sit here and say, you know, re-nationalize the water companies because we know that's what people want to hear, but that is not going to bring all the money back that's gone out to the investors. So this question of how do you reform the water is, as Tim says, a huge long-term commitment. And I think the Greens' job is to push Liberal Democrats and Labour harder. And that's why we're working so hard to get more Green MPs, so that we can, particularly in the expectation that Labour will possibly form the next government, push them harder to make genuine commitments to the climate and to the environment, not to roll back on their £28 billion pledges. And that's what we see as our job.”
Tim Farron, Liberal Democrat Party
“I think you can't divorce the leakage of money from the leakage of water. They are completely intrinsically connected. And so, my sense and our party's position on this is that re-nationalisation might be, as far as I can see myself, a way of spending an awful lot of money and not achieving anything. And so my sense is I wish privatisation never happened. I'm not convinced spending billions of pounds on buying those companies back and that money going into shareholders' pockets is the best use of public money. Far better to transform the structure of those companies so they become public benefit effectively, not-for-profit companies. And therefore you're still able to raise the money, and any public money that there is, you spend on sorting the problem out. I'm open to alternative suggestions if people think it could be done, re-nationalised in a way which wouldn't mean a vast amount of public money not going on solving the problem. But the point is, if you're able to therefore prevent money leaking out, so is it £67 billion in dividends has leaked out of the water industry since privatisation. That money could have been spent on our network. Now we are where we are, we're not in 1989, but if we were in that period of time, that's the amount of money that is missing from the system. Which is why it's right for politicians to be honest and say, we'll not fix it overnight. But you start overnight, and you start by changing the structure of the companies so the money doesn't leak out of the system and changing and strengthening the regulator. It feels like too cosy a relationship. You look about, for example, bonuses are not the be all and end all. I've never worked in a business where anybody got paid bonuses, but my understanding is bonuses is a thing that you get for doing a good job. Ofwat for example are still consulting, thinking and stroking their chins about whether we're going to do anything to regulate bonuses. Well, I want a regulator that is far more incisive and more immediate and able to take tough action than that. So, yeah, changing the structure of companies and changing and strengthening the regulation then gives us the ability to invest in sorting out the infrastructure. We've got, what, 400 million litres of water being leaked just out of the nation's bathrooms every year. Things like that, the retrofitting that could solve that problem, doing an awful lot of investment in the existing networks, bearing in mind there's a big body of work to be done over even knowing where the pipes are in the first place. So many regions, we haven't got accurate maps at all, we certainly don't up in the Lake District. I can't tell you where the lakes are, I can't tell you where the pipes are, and so being able to get to grips with the beginning of the problem gives you the ability to maybe solve it.”
Toby Perkins, Labour Party
“Well, I think the first thing to say, and I think it's worth saying this, is that it's not by any means a crazy idea, it's just that the government could run water happens in many countries, and that's why the Labour Party opposed privatisation in the first place, and why I think it was a huge mistake. But in terms of bringing it back into public ownership, it's not true to say it just could be done by some sort of special administration and therefore there wouldn't be a cost. It would cost billions and billions of pounds that would be stuffed into the pockets of those who own the water companies at a time when we've got a massive underspending in our National Health Service, we've got massive infrastructure challenges facing us. The IMF today announced that the government's got a £30 billion a year black hole in its future plans. So to tackle water in that way, in a way that doesn't bring any extra money into the sector, is not in itself a policy for addressing these challenges. It's not a crazy policy to nationalise water, but it is not straight to suggest that this doesn't come at huge public cost. And I agree that that isn't the priority. What is the priority is to firstly strengthen regulation so that we hold the water companies to account both legally and financially in terms of the standards that must be demanded.
It's to strengthen Ofwat, to make sure that their remit, working alongside the Environment Agency, holds water companies' feet to the fire. It's to ensure that the polluter pays, whether that be the water company or anyone else, whether that be through industry or agriculture. It's also to make sure that the environment and land management scheme, which was a really important, quite brave initiative of the government in theory, actually works to support farmers to reduce the agricultural run-off, which is another part of the whole pollution. And pollution and fundamentally to make sure that we tackle the under-investment in infrastructure that has been in the water industry and that has been in a whole raft of industries over the course particularly of the last 14 years and arguably over a much longer period than that.”
James Wallace, “Toby just to follow on then, do you see any hope that we might from a Labour government or coalition or whatever we're going to see that there might be some sort of expedition or speeding up of for example investment in reservoirs and pressuring water companies to fix the leakage. You mentioned 3 billion litres a day, that is a frightening amount isn't it? Is Labour willing to make commitments like that?”
Toby Perkins, “Yes, we absolutely will be holding the water companies to account far more strongly than has happened so far. PR24 is going to take place, first announcement on that is going by probably the time of the general election, the forward plan for the next five years in terms of that investment will have been put in place. It's important that there is an investment, but it's also important that the water companies are held to account to actually deliver on the scale of investment that is there. But then there's also in terms of the scarcity, the warnings that we've had this week of potentially running out by 2032 are huge. There's a massive need to build more housing and that can only be done with infrastructure alongside that housing in the way that the Labour Party has been talking about. Today we've got a housing crisis in this country and addressing that is going to be fundamental too. So there is going to be a real need for a Labour party to work across the sector with all aspects to make sure we address these issues because fundamentally without the infrastructure in place we'll carry on with the failure we've seen.”