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    Ofwat decision on 5 objecting water companies: AMP8 project impacts for engineers

    March 11, 2026|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    Ofwat decision on 5 objecting water companies: AMP8 project impacts for engineers

    First reported on New Civil Engineer

    30 Second Briefing

    An independent panel has allowed five objecting water companies to recover only 17% of the additional revenue they sought from customers following challenges to Ofwat’s 2025–30 price control. The ruling materially constrains bill-funded capital programmes for network renewal, treatment works upgrades and resilience schemes, potentially forcing rephasing or downsizing of major pipeline, storage and wastewater projects. Contractors and consultants can expect tighter cost scrutiny, value engineering pressure and possible deferral of non-regulatory enhancement works across the AMP8 period.

    Technical Brief

    • Ruling constrains allowed revenue across both base maintenance and enhancement, not only discretionary schemes.
    • Companies must still meet statutory drinking water and environmental obligations despite reduced customer-funded allowances.
    • Expect sharper prioritisation of asset health interventions on high-consequence mains, sewers and treatment bottlenecks.
    • Alliance frameworks and D&B partners likely to see tighter target-cost envelopes and more pain/gain exposure.
    • Supply-chain inflation and labour cost escalation risks will need stronger productivity and standardisation to maintain margins.

    Our Take

    With Ofwat already backing large strategic resource options like the £510M Grand Union Canal and £200M Minworth schemes, a tight 2025–30 price control settlement in the United Kingdom signals that companies will need to deliver these capex-heavy transfers under stronger cost discipline rather than relying on bill increases.

    The constrained allowance for the five objecting companies sits alongside Ofwat’s £25M innovation lab funding, suggesting regulators expect efficiency and demand‑management technologies to close part of the investment gap instead of higher customer tariffs.

    Upcoming compulsory condition‑monitoring requirements flagged in Defra’s white paper, where Ofwat is a key actor, mean that from 2025–30 operators may have to re‑prioritise spend towards asset health and leakage reduction within a more restrictive revenue envelope.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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