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Thames Water on collision course with government over bonuses


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Thames Water has insisted it has the right to pay its executives lucrative โ€œretention paymentsโ€ for agreeing an emergency ยฃ3bn loan, setting the beleaguered utility on a collision course with ministers who are determined to block the awards.

A government spokesperson said on Friday that ministers would intervene if Thames Water persisted in attempts to keep the โ€œoutrageousโ€ payments after the company claimed it could sidestep new legislation designed to prevent controversial bonuses.ย 

โ€œThis is a crude attempt to play the public for fools and cover up corporate greed. This government will not stand idly by if Thames bosses try to plunder the company for personal gain,โ€ the government spokesperson said.ย 

โ€œThe era of profiting from failure is over. We will take any action necessary to stop these outrageous payments.โ€

Ministers have said that they expected water regulator Ofwat to block Thames Water from handing out the awards to senior executives as a reward for securing the controversial ยฃ3bn loan, which comes with an expensive 9.75 per cent interest rate and fees.

But Thames Water told the Financial Times that because the payouts were โ€œretention paymentsโ€ they would not be covered by Ofwatโ€™s new powers.ย The awards โ€” up to half of annual salary โ€” come on top of executivesโ€™ salaries and other bonuses.ย 

โ€œThese are not performance-related bonuses, as covered by the (Water) Act, but rather are retention payments,โ€ a spokesperson for the utility said on Friday.ย 

โ€œIt is critical that the business retains the people best placed to deliver the improved outcomes our stakeholders rightly expect.โ€

Thames Waterโ€™s defiant stance on Friday prompted anger inside Whitehall, with one official saying it was โ€œludicrousโ€ for the company to claim that โ€œretention paymentsโ€ were not a form of performance-related pay.ย 

Thames Water, the UKโ€™s largest water company, has become a lightning rod for public anger as it tries to fend off renationalisation under the governmentโ€™s special administration regime.

The company, which serves about a quarter of the countryโ€™s population, is struggling under the weight of its ยฃ20bn debt mountain and is in exclusive discussions with the private equity firm KKR to take over the business.

The utility came perilously close to running out of money before it secured the ยฃ3bn loan โ€” challenged in court by rival bondholders โ€” from US hedge funds including Elliott Management and Silver Point.

Thames Water has declined to say who would receive the payments or exactly how much they would be worth.ย 

Chief executive Chris Weston, who came under fire for accepting a ยฃ195,000 bonus for three months work last year, is not one of those receiving a retention payment, Thames Water has said.

The company has already threatened to raise its executivesโ€™ base salaries if the government pressed ahead with the plans to restrict bonuses.ย The scale of the retention payments were disclosed by the utilityโ€™s chair, Sir Adrian Montague, during a Commons committee hearing on Tuesday.ย 

Ofwat will receive new powers from next month to ban โ€œundeserved bonusesโ€ where standards on environmental and financial management of water companies are not met. Those long-awaited powers are retrospective for the financial year 2024-25.

A consultation on the new bonus rules is still ongoing but ministers hope they will be in place by June.ย 

Previously, Ofwat did not have the explicit power to ban or curb executive bonuses, and could only do so if this would help it meet its duties โ€” such as ensuring that companies are financially resilient.ย 

However, the recently passed Water (Special Measures) Act is meant to give Ofwat the powers to remove bonuses where companies have failed to meet certain standards in relation to โ€œconsumer mattersโ€, โ€œthe environmentโ€ or the โ€œfinancial resilienceโ€ of water companies.ย ย 

Ofwat said: We are using our powers to demand information from Thames Water urgently on comments they made in front of the Efra committee earlier this week about providing retention bonuses.



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